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Malefactor   /mˈæləfˌæktər/  /mˈælfˌæktər/   Listen
Malefactor

noun
1.
Someone who has committed a crime or has been legally convicted of a crime.  Synonyms: criminal, crook, felon, outlaw.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Malefactor" Quotes from Famous Books



... convinced at once that either upon their arrival they had found that you were already dead, or that in some miraculous way you had escaped. I therefore hurried back to the next group. When the chariot came up there was a shout of, 'What is the news? Where is the malefactor?' The officials checked their horses and replied: 'A mistake has been made. The prince assures us that the lad was a poor slave and wholly innocent of this affair. He has satisfied himself that in their ...
— The Cat of Bubastes - A Tale of Ancient Egypt • G. A. Henty

... The whole desperate passage, short as it was, had the right feeling of law-breaking about it. Policemen looked reproachfully at them as they fled on. Lancelot, as guest of honour, sat in front, and wagged his hand like a semaphore at all times and in all faces; he felt part policeman and part malefactor, which was just right. Then they thrilled at the smooth and accomplished villainy of Mr. Du Maurier, lost not one line of his faultless clothes, nor one syllable of his easy utterance, "like treacle off ...
— Love and Lucy • Maurice Henry Hewlett

... others put together. For the original claimants to the soil being all dead and buried, and no one remaining to inherit or dispute the soil, the Spaniards, as the next immediate occupants, entered upon the possession as clearly as the hangman succeeds to the clothes of the malefactor—and as they have Blackstone[21] and all the learned expounders of the law on their side, they may set all actions of ejectment at defiance—and this last right may be entitled the right by extermination, or in other words, the right ...
— Knickerbocker's History of New York, Complete • Washington Irving

... were signals for general holidays; people flocked from the most distant shires, decked in best attire, to witness the doing to death of some poor malefactor. But this was no ordinary occasion; and, as if to emphasize the fact, a great throng had assembled at Westminster even before the sun arose, on the day set apart for the beheading ...
— The Fifth of November - A Romance of the Stuarts • Charles S. Bentley

... after the death of the other generals, he died under a punishment inflicted by the king, not like Clearchus and the other commanders, who were beheaded (which appears to be the speediest kind of death); but after living a year in torture, like a malefactor, he is said at length to ...
— The First Four Books of Xenophon's Anabasis • Xenophon


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