canaille
21canaille — noun Etymology: French, from Italian canaglia, from cane dog, from Latin canis more at hound Date: 1661 1. rabble, riffraff 2. proletarian …
22canaille — /keuh nayl /; Fr. /kann nah yeu/, n. riffraff; rabble. [1670 80; < F < It canaglia pack of dogs, equiv. to can(e) dog ( < L canis) + aglia collective suffix] * * * …
23canaille — noun a) The lowest class of people; the rabble; the vulgar. b) Shorts or inferior flour …
24Canaille — Ca|nail|le [ka naljə , österr.: ka na̮ij(ə) ]: ↑ Kanaille. * * * Ca|nail|le [ka naljə, auch: ka najə]: ↑Kanaille …
25Canaille — Ca|nail|le 〈[kanạljə] f.; Gen.: , Pl.: n〉 Lump, Schurke [Etym.: frz., »Gesindel, Lumpenpack« <lat. canis »Hund«] …
26Canaille — Ca|nail|le [ka naljə] usw. vgl. ↑Kanaille usw …
27canaille — ca·naille || kÉ™ nÉ‘ËiË n. mob, riffraff, rabble …
28canaille — (kah NYE) [French, from Latin: a pack of dogs] Rabble; riffraff; a mob …
29canaille — n. [Fr.] Populace, rabble, mob, riffraff, the vulgar, the crowd, vulgar herd, the ignoble vulgar, low people, lowest class of people, the multitude, the million, scum of society, dregs of society, ignobile vulgus, rag tag, tag rag, tag rag and… …
30canaille — ca·naille …