| 释义 | 
		pauperpau‧per /ˈpɔːpə $ ˈpɒːpər/ noun [countable] old-fashioned    pauperOrigin: 1400-1500 Latin  ‘poor’  - Deliberately choosing to marry in an area full of paupers - Benjamin might just have well have been in Frome!
 - During those decades bands of pauper migrants went on the tramp in search of food and a living.
 - Mr. Chapman enquired of the Board whether the paupers and children should be allowed to have money in the workhouse.
 - Some say Meurent died so abject a pauper that no papers were kept, no gravesite marked.
 - The fall was most dramatic among out-door paupers.
 - The Latin pauper means a person of modest means rather than some one without food, roof, or clothing.
 - The overseers didn't like working the pauper children, and having to beat them to keep them at their tasks.
 - There was nothing for girls, only drudgery and breeding, specially paupers like herself.
 
    someone who is very poor  |