They wore funny clothes and keep them selves dirty not clean.
Sometimes they wore fancy clothes and acted quiet funny and they were dirty.
Sometimes they just done it for fun.
the beggar is laughing at who?
they our poor
Antinous laughed at him, but Penelope sayd that anyone can try, so he just did it)
A badge-cove is an obsolete term for a licensed beggar or a poor pensioner.
he lived in a golden house. where his people are beggar, poor, no human rights
During late 1720s, he became a poor man and a beggar. till 1721 he died.
The word 'poor' can be a noun (e.g. He gave away his wealth to the poor) or an adjective (e.g. the poor man, a poor performance, a poor result, poor health). Depending on the meaning, we can use words like beggar, very bad, weak ...
No, it was royalty until he saw 4 sights - a sick man, a poor man, a beggar, and a corpse.
You laughed out loud...
In Irish it's ceachartha / stiocaire / scrábach
The beggar is a woman, because if the beggar is not the woman's brother, but the beggar has the woman for a sister, then the beggar is a woman, the only characteristic not mentioned in the question. beggars can be women
Answer:"Poor in spirit" is obviously not a material poverty condition, but an internal self-esteem issue. Yet, the inspired word for "poor" (ptochos: pto-khos') attributes a lowly poverty beggar status to the spiritual condition.The connotation pictures a "cringing beggar." The "poor in spirit" is a "humble" person often set upon by life's circumstances, often in "distress"... as opposed to a person with a "haughty" spirit. Proud.The "poor in spirit" possess the "spiritual heart condition" worthy of inheriting the Kingdom of God.