Loitering refers to lingering or standing aimlessly in a public place without a clear purpose. It is often associated with idling or loitering in a way that may raise suspicions or disrupt the normal flow of activities in that place.
Loitering is a noun because it refers to the act of lingering or hanging around in a public place without a clear purpose or permission. It identifies a specific behavior or action rather than describing the person performing it.
The Tagalog word for "English" is "Ingles."
Tagalog of about: tungkol
The Tagalog word for "area" is "lugar."
Anti-loitering is a term used to describe someone who is against loitering altogether.
Loitering with Intent was created in 1981.
Yes. Loitering is a verb form and a gerund as well, but can be used to describe a noun. An example would be "loitering teens."
Loitering with Intent has 224 pages.
"The police arrested me for loitering," is in the active voice. A passive version of this might be, "I was arrested by the police for loitering."
The ISBN of "Loitering with Intent" by Muriel Spark is 9780940322926.
The word loitering is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb to loiter.
$100.00
Loitering is prohibited.
The cast of No Loitering - 2012 includes: Izzy Dead as Bum Tommy Kill as himself
Loitering is generally a misdemeanor offense - therefore not longer than 1 year in jail.
While "vagrancy" is vagrancia, the Spanish verb is holgazanear (to loiter), with the gerund form holgazaneando (idle, idling, loitering).