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English
Etymology
From squat + -er.
Pronunciation
Noun
squatter (plural squatters)
- One who squats, sits down idly.
1907 August, Robert W Chambers, chapter VI, in The Younger Set, New York, N.Y.: D. Appleton & Company, →OCLC:“I don't mean all of your friends—only a small proportion—which, however, connects your circle with that deadly, idle, brainless bunch—the insolent chatterers at the opera, […] the chlorotic squatters on huge yachts, the speed-mad fugitives from the furies of ennui, the neurotic victims of mental cirrhosis, the jewelled animals whose moral code is the code of the barnyard—!"
- One who occupies a building or land without title or permission.
- (Australia, historical) One who occupied Crown land.
2004, James Jupp, The English in Australia, page 62:While settlement in New South Wales was initially confined, many moved outside the boundaries to become squatters, eventually consolidating their originally illegal hold on the land.
- (Philippines) A poor vagrant; a hobo or beggar; one suffering from extreme poverty.
- Synonym: (Philippines) informal settler
- (Australia, historical) A large-scale grazier and landowner.
1895, “Waltzing Matilda”, Banjo Paterson (lyrics):Down came the squatter, a'riding his thoroughbred,
Down came policemen, one, two and three.
'Whose is the jumbuck you've got in the tucker bag?
You'll come a-waltzing Matilda, with me.'
- 1970, George Sampson, The Concise Cambridge History of English Literature, 3rd Edition, p.754:
- Boldrewood was a squatter, a magistrate and a commissioner of goldfields and knew thoroughly the life he described in Robbery Under Arms (1888), the story of the bushranger Captain Starlight—first serialised in The Sydney Mail in 1881—and in his numerous other novels, which included The Squatter′s Dream (1890).
- 1993, Manning Clark, Michael Cathcart (abridging editor), Manning Clark′s History of Australia: Abridged by Michael Cathcart, p.218:
- In Parliament, at least, the squatters were secure. ¶ In the early 1840s a severe depression threatened livelihoods in all the colonies except South Australia and many squatters resorted to slaughtering their sheep and boiling them down for tallow.
2010, Mary Ellen Snodgrass, Peter Carey: A Literary Companion, page 233:His dealings with squatter R. R. McBean and superintendents Hare and Nicolson amaze the 16-year-old, who has little experience with the wealthy privileged class.
- (informal) A squat toilet.
2012, Randall L. Erickson, Traveling Business Class, page 54:All of the toilets in both the men's and women's sides were squatters.
Usage notes
- In Australian historical usage, the distinction between the senses of occupier of Crown land and large scale landowner is often blurred; many of the original illegal landholders became rich and, as a group, politically powerful.
Derived terms
Translations
one occupying a place without permission
See also
- cocky (small scale farmer)
Adjective
squatter
- comparative form of squat: more squat
1950 July, J. G. Gibbons, “Sightseeing on the Inner Circle”, in Railway Magazine, page 485:Nearer at hand, to the left of a huge block (a telephone exchange) and over the top of another, lower, survivor of the blitz, rises the pinnacled tower of St. Alban's Church, and just to the left a glimpse can be obtained of the top of the squatter tower of St. Mary's Aldermanbury.
Anagrams
French
Etymology
Borrowed from English squat.
Pronunciation
Verb
squatter
- to squat
- to crash (to make temporary living arrangements)
On va squatter chez toi ou chez moi ?- Do we crash at your place or at mine?
- to tie up
Conjugation
squatter
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avoir + past participle
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squattant /skwa.tɑ̃/
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ayant + past participle
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squatté /skwa.te/
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indicative
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je (j’)
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tu
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il, elle, on
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nous
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vous
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ils, elles
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(simple tenses)
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present
|
squatte /skwat/
|
squattes /skwat/
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squatte /skwat/
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squattons /skwa.tɔ̃/
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squattez /skwa.te/
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squattent /skwat/
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imperfect
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squattais /skwa.tɛ/
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squattais /skwa.tɛ/
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squattait /skwa.tɛ/
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squattions /skwa.tjɔ̃/
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squattiez /skwa.tje/
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squattaient /skwa.tɛ/
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past historic2
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squattai /skwa.te/
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squattas /skwa.ta/
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squatta /skwa.ta/
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squattâmes /skwa.tam/
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squattâtes /skwa.tat/
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squattèrent /skwa.tɛʁ/
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future
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squatterai /skwa.tʁe/
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squatteras /skwa.tʁa/
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squattera /skwa.tʁa/
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squatterons /skwa.tʁɔ̃/
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squatterez /skwa.tʁe/
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squatteront /skwa.tʁɔ̃/
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conditional
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squatterais /skwa.tʁɛ/
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squatterais /skwa.tʁɛ/
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squatterait /skwa.tʁɛ/
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squatterions /skwa.tə.ʁjɔ̃/
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squatteriez /skwa.tə.ʁje/
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squatteraient /skwa.tʁɛ/
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(compound tenses)
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present perfect
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present indicative of avoir + past participle
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pluperfect
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imperfect indicative of avoir + past participle
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past anterior2
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past historic of avoir + past participle
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future perfect
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future of avoir + past participle
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conditional perfect
|
conditional of avoir + past participle
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subjunctive
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que je (j’)
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que tu
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qu’il, qu’elle
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que nous
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que vous
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qu’ils, qu’elles
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(simple tenses)
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present
|
squatte /skwat/
|
squattes /skwat/
|
squatte /skwat/
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squattions /skwa.tjɔ̃/
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squattiez /skwa.tje/
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squattent /skwat/
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imperfect2
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squattasse /skwa.tas/
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squattasses /skwa.tas/
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squattât /skwa.ta/
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squattassions /skwa.ta.sjɔ̃/
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squattassiez /skwa.ta.sje/
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squattassent /skwa.tas/
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(compound tenses)
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past
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present subjunctive of avoir + past participle
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pluperfect2
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imperfect subjunctive of avoir + past participle
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imperative
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–
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tu
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–
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nous
|
vous
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–
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simple
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—
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squatte /skwat/
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—
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squattons /skwa.tɔ̃/
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squattez /skwa.te/
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—
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compound
|
—
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simple imperative of avoir + past participle
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—
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simple imperative of avoir + past participle
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simple imperative of avoir + past participle
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—
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1 The French gerund is usable only with the preposition en.
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2 In less formal writing or speech, these tenses may be found to have been replaced in the following way:
- past historic → present perfect
- past anterior → pluperfect
- imperfect subjunctive → present subjunctive
- pluperfect subjunctive → past subjunctive
(Christopher Kendris , Master the Basics: French, pp. 77, 78, 79, 81).
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Derived terms
Further reading
Anagrams