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Definition of marked man in English: marked mannoun A man who is singled out as a target for hostility or attack. he said what they did was wrong and he may well be a marked man now Example sentencesExamples - It seems I'm a marked man, and my wife and I are suffering terribly.
- The first Sinn Fein mayor of that city, he was a marked man because of his well-known IRA connection.
- While this left him a marked man in his native land, it probably made him all the more sympathetic to Hartman and the former Nazi sympathisers in the Afrikaner cultural establishment.
- Because, ever since you made me a special target, I've been a marked man!
- His success is a double-edged sword: he is now a marked man.
- God's not buying it, and Cain is sent to wander, a marked man.
- He'll be a marked man on Sunday, but then is that not always the case when he pulls on the jersey of club or county?
- But hey, if they're former Ba'athists, they were probably already marked men anyway.
- Born into a Jewish family in 1896 and schooled in left - wing politics, he became a marked man as the Nazis swept to power, despite having served in the German army in 1916.
- But then he said he couldn't because they would explore all the aspects of him being an informant and he would end up a dead man, a marked man in the prison system.
- Greater Manchester's burglars are marked men and on the run - thanks to an invisible policeman.
- Together, their triumphs poured in, but to those they defeated they were marked men, and to an extent still are.
- Looks like he may be a marked man for bringing Norfolk Police into disrepute.
- The activist had been a marked man for some time.
- Either way, York was fairly sure he was now a marked man.
- Strip a man of his fortune and status, and suddenly he is a marked man, the target of antipathy of every shape and stripe!
- That inexperience, though, makes Spivey a marked man.
- In the film, even after he learns that he is a secret agent and a marked man, he doesn't do this.
- At the height of his fame and success, Barris was a marked man.
- These marked men know the world, or at least that town, is out to get them.
Definition of marked man in US English: marked mannoun A person who is singled out for special treatment, especially to be harmed or killed. he said what they did was wrong and he may well be a marked man now Example sentencesExamples - These marked men know the world, or at least that town, is out to get them.
- In the film, even after he learns that he is a secret agent and a marked man, he doesn't do this.
- That inexperience, though, makes Spivey a marked man.
- At the height of his fame and success, Barris was a marked man.
- He'll be a marked man on Sunday, but then is that not always the case when he pulls on the jersey of club or county?
- Because, ever since you made me a special target, I've been a marked man!
- Looks like he may be a marked man for bringing Norfolk Police into disrepute.
- God's not buying it, and Cain is sent to wander, a marked man.
- Born into a Jewish family in 1896 and schooled in left - wing politics, he became a marked man as the Nazis swept to power, despite having served in the German army in 1916.
- But then he said he couldn't because they would explore all the aspects of him being an informant and he would end up a dead man, a marked man in the prison system.
- While this left him a marked man in his native land, it probably made him all the more sympathetic to Hartman and the former Nazi sympathisers in the Afrikaner cultural establishment.
- But hey, if they're former Ba'athists, they were probably already marked men anyway.
- His success is a double-edged sword: he is now a marked man.
- The first Sinn Fein mayor of that city, he was a marked man because of his well-known IRA connection.
- Greater Manchester's burglars are marked men and on the run - thanks to an invisible policeman.
- The activist had been a marked man for some time.
- It seems I'm a marked man, and my wife and I are suffering terribly.
- Either way, York was fairly sure he was now a marked man.
- Together, their triumphs poured in, but to those they defeated they were marked men, and to an extent still are.
- Strip a man of his fortune and status, and suddenly he is a marked man, the target of antipathy of every shape and stripe!
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