highwayman

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of highwayman He is captured by Bedouin highwaymen, who plan to rob him. Steve Hindy, Foreign Affairs, 27 Aug. 2015 Shortly before midnight on May 23, 1798, highwaymen just north of Dublin intercepted and set on fire a mail coach headed to Belfast. Joseph Patrick Kelly, The Conversation, 20 May 2025 The sybaritic highwayman Macheath maneuvers between a cutthroat capitalist milieu (Mr. and Mrs. Peachum) and a corrupt police force (led by Tiger Brown) while seducing daughters from both worlds (Polly Peachum and Lucy Brown). Alex Ross, New Yorker, 14 Apr. 2025 In the irreverent retelling of the 18th-century highwayman’s life, Turpin is the most famous but least likely of robbers, whose success is defined mostly by his charm, showmanship, and great hair. Jake Kanter, Deadline, 16 Jan. 2025 Written by Fielding, Richard Naylor and Jon Brittain, the series followed the contemptuous life of the 18th-century highwayman, known in York, England, as a thief, poacher and killer but whose exploits have been widely romanticized in modern culture. Lily Ford, The Hollywood Reporter, 16 Jan. 2025 Dick Turpin was an English robber and highwayman whose criminal activities gained him notoriety in the early eighteenth century. Ben Morse, CNN, 14 Jan. 2025 The group gets further assistance from a charming aristocratic dandy/secret highwayman named Charles Devereaux (Frank Dillane). Ars Technica, 24 Dec. 2024 In the irreverent retelling of the 18th-century highwayman’s life, Turpin is the most famous but least likely of robbers, whose success is defined mostly by his charm, showmanship, and great hair. Jake Kanter, Deadline, 16 Jan. 2025
Recent Examples of Synonyms for highwayman
Noun
  • Looking eastward, the notion that Iran, which took hundreds of thousands of casualties in repelling an Iraqi juggernaut in the 1980s, is going to melt in terror in the face of several thousand ISIS brigands is absurd.
    Steven Simon, Foreign Affairs, 26 Aug. 2014
  • Captured by brigands, the immigrants are herded into a remote Libyan prison camp where they are tormented and tortured.
    Peter Rainer, The Christian Science Monitor, 22 Feb. 2024
Noun
  • There were corridos about the exploits of bandits and outlaws, some of them Robin Hood-esque characters who outwitted oafish authorities and helped the poor.
    Kate Linthicum, Los Angeles Times, 11 May 2025
  • The Golden State Warriors came out like bandits to open the third quarter of Game 2 on Thursday, pulling to within seven of the Timberwolves early in the frame at Target Center.
    Jace Frederick, Twin Cities, 9 May 2025
Noun
  • The Sea Witch By Eva Leigh Canary Street Press: 448 pages, $19 (Aug. 26) Leigh has penned a pirate romantasy with an ultra-hot relationship at its center.
    Lorraine Berry, Los Angeles Times, 27 May 2025
  • However, the sugars in a molasses spray caused an increase of beneficial insects such as adult lacewings, lady beetles, weevil parasitoids, big-eyed bugs, minute pirate bugs, and adult hover flies.
    Mary Marlowe Leverette, Southern Living, 24 May 2025
Noun
  • New threats emerge, including a ruthless new villain (Bill Skarsgård) and a blind assassin from Wick’s past, played by Donnie Yen in a standout performance.
    Emily Blackwood, People.com, 6 June 2025
  • The operation, made up of Belarusian contract killers, runs a ballet academy that is a front for their assassin training facility.
    Shannon Carlin, Time, 6 June 2025
Noun
  • Or even those Californians, such as many in San Francisco and Los Angeles, who are just fed up with the perception that California is soft on criminals.
    Anita Chabria, Los Angeles Times, 31 May 2025
  • The Forgotten Gender Nonconformists of the Old West Livia Gershon April 27, 2018 In the Old West, cross-dressing was sometimes a disguise for criminals on the lam.
    The Editors, JSTOR Daily, 30 May 2025
Noun
  • In the Western from writer-director Joel Souza, the young actor plays Lucas Hollister, a grieving teen in 1880s Wyoming whose accidental murder of a neighbor kicks off an unlikely alliance with Baldwin’s notorious outlaw Harland Rust — who turns out to be Lucas’ grandfather.
    Jack Smart, People.com, 2 May 2025
  • And her new single is a duet with another, even more hirsute outlaw traditionalist, Jamey Johnson.
    David Browne, Rolling Stone, 13 May 2025
Noun
  • The latter implies that occasionally a few or many desperados enter the Treasury markets, selling everything in sight with an eye on bringing discipline or whatever to Washington.
    John Tamny, Forbes.com, 25 May 2025
  • The other actors in the terrific eight-member cast — which includes Eddie Cooper, Dashiell Eaves and Ken Marks — play multiple roles as townsfolk, family members, lawmen, desperados, hucksters and suckers.
    Frank Rizzo, Variety, 27 Apr. 2025
Noun
  • Carroll was charged with one count each of unlawful possession of a weapon by a repeat felony offender, a class X felony, and unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon, a class 2 felony.
    Naperville Sun, Chicago Tribune, 28 May 2025
  • Xavier Crump, 28, of Oakland, was charged with forcible oral copulation, second-degree robbery, criminal threats and being a felon in possession of a firearm, court records show.
    Nate Gartrell, Mercury News, 28 May 2025

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Cite this Entry

“Highwayman.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/highwayman. Accessed 11 Jun. 2025.

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