Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word
homeless. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
homeless, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
homeless in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
homeless you have here. The definition of the word
homeless will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
homeless, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
Etymology
From Middle English *homles, *hamles, from Old English hāmlēas (“homeless”), equivalent to home + -less. Cognate with Dutch heemloos, Danish hjemløs (“homeless”), Swedish hemlös (“homeless”). Compare also German heimatlos (“homeless”), Icelandic heimilislaus (“homeless”), West Frisian dakleas (“homeless”, literally “having no roof, roofless”).
Pronunciation
Adjective
homeless (not comparable)
- Lacking a permanent place of residence.
Whenever I pass the park, I see the homeless people sleeping on the benches.
1995 [1982], Jean-Luc Domenach, “The First Leftist Excesses and Their Consequences (Summer 1955-Winter 1956)”, in A M Berrett, transl., The Origins of the Great Leap Forward: The Case of One Chinese Province [Aux origines du Grand Bond en avant], Westview Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 44:Xinyang special region received 1,200-1,400 mm of rain between June and August 1956: 280,000 homes were destroyed and 3.2 million peasants (out of a total of almost 6 million) were left homeless. In the most affected county in the special region and the province, Huaibin, 60 percent of the total surface area was covered by floods and 230,000 out of 440,000 inhabitants left homeless; grain production fell by 66 percent in 1956 and the authorities had to send large amounts of relief.
2022 November 2, Paul Bigland, “New trains, old trains, and splendid scenery”, in RAIL, number 969, page 57:The massive arches of the retaining walls have become tent city for the many homeless people in the area.
- (of places) Containing no place that might be called home.
1850, [Alfred, Lord Tennyson], In Memoriam, London: Edward Moxon, , →OCLC, Canto XXXV, page 54:But I should turn mine ears and hear
The moanings of the homeless sea,
The sound of streams that swift or slow
Draw down Æonian hills, and sow
The dust of continents to be; […]
Derived terms
Descendants
- → Japanese: ホームレス (hōmuresu)
Translations
lacking a permanent residence
- Arabic: مُتَشَرِّد (ar) m (mutašarrid)
- Armenian: անօթեւան (anōtʻewan), դատարկուն (hy) (datarkun)
- Basque: etxegabe (eu)
- Catalan: sensellar (ca), sensesostre (ca)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 無家可歸 / 无家可归 (zh) (wújiākěguī), 露宿街頭 / 露宿街头 (lùsù jiētóu)
- Czech: nebydlící, bez přístřeší, bez domova, bezprizorný, bezdomovec (cs)
- Danish: hjemløs (da)
- Dutch: dakloos (nl)
- Esperanto: senhejma
- Estonian: kodutu (et)
- Faroese: heimleysur
- Finnish: koditon (fi), asunnoton (fi)
- French: SDF (fr) (sans domicile fixe (fr)), itinérant (fr) (Quebec), sans-abri (fr)
- Galician: sen teito, sen fogar
- Georgian: უსახლკარო (usaxlḳaro), უბინაო (ubinao), მიუსაფარი (miusapari)
- German: obdachlos (de), wohnungslos (de)
- Greek: άστεγος (el) (ástegos)
- Ancient: ἄνοικος (ánoikos), ἄστεγος (ástegos), ἄχωρος (ákhōros)
- Hebrew: חֲסַר בַּיִת (he) (khasár báyit) (noun), הוֹמְלֶס (hómles) (noun)
- Hindi: बेघर (hi) (beghar), निराश्रय (hi) (nirāśray)
- Hungarian: hajléktalan (hu)
- Icelandic: heimilislaus
- Ido: senhema (io)
- Indonesian: tuna wisma
- Irish: gan dídean
- Italian: senzatetto (it)
- Japanese: 家なき (ie naki), 無宿の (ja) (mushuku no), ホームレス (ja) (hōmuresu)
- Korean: please add this translation if you can
- Latin: palabundus
- Malay: gelandangan, tuna wisma
- Maori: kāinga kore, kāingakore
- Middle English: herberweles
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: hjemløs, husløs (no)
- Nynorsk: heimlaus
- Persian: بیخانمان (fa) (bi-xânemân)
- Polish: bezdomny (pl) m
- Portuguese: sem-teto (pt), sem-abrigo (pt) (chiefly Portugal); desabrigado (pt) (especially when due to a disaster); only as a noun (“homeless person”): morador de rua m
- Romanian: fără casă, fără adăpost, vagabond (ro)
- Russian: бездо́мный (ru) m (bezdómnyj), бомж (ru) m (bomž) (noun), (children) беспризо́рный (ru) (besprizórnyj)
- Scots: hameless
- Spanish: sin hogar, vagabundo (es), desalojado (es), sintecho, sin techo, en situación de calle
- Swedish: hemlös (sv)
- Telugu: వసతిలేని (vasatilēni)
- Thai: ไร้บ้าน, เร่ร่อน (th), ร่อนเร่ (th), พเนจร (th) (pá-nee-jɔɔn), จรจัด (th) (jɔɔn-jàt)
- Turkish: evsiz (tr), vatansız (tr), evsiz barksız
- Ukrainian: бездо́мний (uk) m (bezdómnyj), безприту́льний (uk) (bezprytúlʹnyj)
- Vietnamese: vô gia cư (vi), không cửa không nhà
- Walloon: sins toet (wa) ("sins-toet" for noun)
|
Noun
homeless (plural homelesses)
- (nonstandard, possibly offensive) A person who is homeless.
- Oszlár Kálmán András, Yoga in the Bed: Tantric Continence & Spiritual Intimacy
- the jobseekers and homelesses or even the future prime minister, all of us are involved in formation of the new world.
1997, Martin Lyle Forst, The Police and the Homeless: Creating a Partnership Between Law Enforcement and Social Service Agencies in the Development of Effective Policies and Programs, page 54:[…] homelesses' due process rights and infringed upon the homelesses' fundamental right to travel […]
Translations
See also
Romanian
Etymology
Unadapted borrowing from English homeless.
Noun
homeless m (plural homeless)
- homeless
Declension