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Delinquent   /dɪlˈɪŋkwənt/   Listen
Delinquent

adjective
1.
Guilty of a misdeed.
2.
Failing in what duty requires.  Synonyms: derelict, neglectful, remiss.  "Neglectful of his duties" , "Remiss of you not to pay your bills"
3.
Past due; not paid at the scheduled time.  Synonym: overdue.  "A delinquent account"
noun
1.
A young offender.  Synonym: juvenile delinquent.



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"Delinquent" Quotes from Famous Books



... almost forgotten that bright kinsman of mine, the chaplain of Hazledon. Pray present my affectionate compliments to him, and say he has not the least idea how very much I revere him. I should like to see his face when he finds it was I who was the delinquent. Constance can turn the tables on him now. But if she ever forgives him, she'll deserve to be as henpecked as Jenkins is; and tell her ...
— The Channings • Mrs. Henry Wood

... Jack as delinquent stood plain, and she would accuse no one else. In the bottom of Imogen's heart lingered, however, the suspicion that only when her mother had seen the cause as lost, the contest as useless, had she hastily assumed the dignified attitude that, for the dizzy, moonlit moment, ...
— A Fountain Sealed • Anne Douglas Sedgwick

... did not like it, being of that class of persons who cannot be happy out of a great town. After the Civil War he was deprived, and his successor had not the decency (the late Dr. Grosart, constant to his own party, made a very unsuccessful attempt to defend the delinquent) to pay him the shabby pittance which the intruders were supposed to furnish to the rightful owners of benefices. At the Restoration he too was restored, and survived it fifteen years, dying in 1674; but his whole literary fame rests on work published a quarter of a century before his death, and ...
— A History of English Literature - Elizabethan Literature • George Saintsbury

... official motto is exactly the reverse of their real aspiration. Under a false flag they play the smuggler with a droll ease of conscience. Is the fraud a conscious one? No—it is but an application of the law of irony. The deception is so common a one that the delinquent becomes unconscious of it. Every nation gives itself the lie in the course of its daily life, and not one feels the ridicule of its position. A man must be a Japanese to perceive the burlesque contradictions of the Christian civilization. He must be a native ...
— Amiel's Journal • Mrs. Humphry Ward

... Switzerland (1874) followed the lead of France. The Balkan States in the treaty of Berlin (1878), upon pressure from Disraeli, agreed to the emancipation of the Jews as one of the conditions for securing their own freedom; Roumania has been notoriously delinquent, however, in adhering to the terms nominated in the bond.[9] The removal of civil disabilities brought the Jew into a wide contact with the Christian. This resulted for the Jews in liberalization of outlook and liberation of capacities and talents, ...
— The Menorah Journal, Volume 1, 1915 • Various


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