1 truant | Definition of truant

truant

noun
tru·​ant | \ ˈtrü-É™nt How to pronounce truant (audio) \

Definition of truant

 (Entry 1 of 3)

: one who shirks duty especially : one who stays out of school without permission

truant

adjective

Definition of truant (Entry 2 of 3)

1 : shirking responsibility
2 : being, resembling, or characteristic of a truant

truant

verb
truanted; truanting; truants

Definition of truant (Entry 3 of 3)

intransitive verb

: to idle away time especially while playing truant

Examples of truant in a Sentence

Noun

an increasing number of truants

Recent Examples on the Web: Noun

In the House of Representatives, East Bay Rep. Eric Swalwell was the top truant of the presidential contenders, missing 39.7 percent of votes this year. Casey Tolan, The Mercury News, "Kamala Harris is skipping Senate votes while running for president — and she’s not the only one," 18 Aug. 2019 Ten were booked as runaways five as truants and one turned out to be an AWOL Marine from Camp Pendleton. Johnny Miller — Jack Viets, San Francisco Chronicle, "Eat-and-greet on Mayor Alioto’s agenda, 1968," 9 May 2018 In Park Hill School District about 150 students who observed the walkout were marked truant. Mará Rose Williams, kansascity, "Independence suspended student who didn't follow rules during gun protest walkout | The Kansas City Star," 20 Mar. 2018 Chon and comedian Daniel So play down-and-out Korean-Americans trying to keep their late dad’s shoe store alive; a delightful Simone Baker is the 11-year-old school truant who helps out in the shop, to the chagrin of her brother (Curtiss Cook. Ty Burr, BostonGlobe.com, "11 movies to stream when the weather is terrible," 15 Mar. 2018 About 150 Park Hill High School students participated, according to junior Ethan Simon, who told The Star that each participant was marked truant. Max Londberg, kansascity, "Students at this KC school were disciplined for honoring Parkland victims with walkout | The Kansas City Star," 14 Mar. 2018 Being tagged a chronic truant – after missing 10 percent or more of the school year – could mean up to a $2,000 fine and jail time for parents or the student. Diana Lambert, sacbee, "Should parents be able to take their kids out of school without getting a truancy letter?," 29 Oct. 2017 Hurt was looking for truants and came upon Montgomery, a 17-year-old skipping school. Adam Geller, The Seattle Times, "Supreme Court rulings reshape penalties for young offenders," 30 July 2017 Getzlaf was joined by Rickard Rakell as five Flames poured out of the bench to replace the truants. Mark Whicker, Orange County Register, "Whicker: Flames’ absence is a present for Ducks," 14 Apr. 2017

Recent Examples on the Web: Adjective

The proposal highlights an issue that has been a problem for Senator Kamala Harris, who ran a program as a prosecutor in San Francisco that used threats of jail time to pressure parents of truant kids. Christina Prignano, BostonGlobe.com, "Elizabeth Warren releases sweeping plan to overhaul criminal justice system," 20 Aug. 2019 In her 2011 inauguration speech, Harris pointed out that in 2010 there were 600,000 truant students in their elementary schools alone. Alexis Jones, Marie Claire, "Kamala Harris' Attorney General Record, Explained," 16 Aug. 2019 The nature of the inquiry is unclear, but the probe is focused on Ballou High School, where allegations were first raised about diplomas wrongly awarded to chronically truant students. Washington Post, "FBI, U.S. Education Department investigating Ballou graduation scandal," 7 Mar. 2018 Under the law, however, parents could still be held criminally liable for their truant children. Sandra Baker, star-telegram, "Law has little impact on Fort Worth students skipping school, but that's a good thing | Fort Worth Star-Telegram," 8 May 2018 The police did not initially investigate it as a crime because the teenager was often truant. Sophie Rebmann, Nadine Schmidt And Judith Vonberg, CNN, "Iraqi asylum-seeker wanted over rape, murder of 14-year-old in Germany," 7 June 2018 She was sent to a truant school, but eventually stopped going altogether. Yosha Gunasekera, Marie Claire, "How One Woman's Sexual Abuse Resulted in Years Behind Bars," 11 May 2018 Before the law changed Sept. 1 2015, truant students could be issued a Class C misdemeanor for failing to attend school. Sandra Baker, star-telegram, "Law has little impact on Fort Worth students skipping school, but that's a good thing | Fort Worth Star-Telegram," 8 May 2018 San Diego County participation in Friday’s National School Walkout to commemorate the Columbine High School shooting was uneven, which is understandable given some districts said those who left campus would be counted as absent, possibly truant. Michael Smolens, sandiegouniontribune.com, "No question they're serious, but will the kids vote?," 25 Apr. 2018

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'truant.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

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First Known Use of truant

Noun

14th century, in the meaning defined above

Adjective

1561, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Verb

1580, in the meaning defined above

History and Etymology for truant

Noun

Middle English, vagabond, idler, from Anglo-French, of Celt origin; akin to Old Irish trógán wretch, trúag wretched

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More Definitions for truant

truant

noun

English Language Learners Definition of truant

: a student who misses school without permission

truant

noun
tru·​ant | \ ˈtrü-É™nt How to pronounce truant (audio) \

Kids Definition of truant

1 : a student who stays out of school without permission
2 : a person who neglects his or her duty

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More from Merriam-Webster on truant

Rhyming Dictionary: Words that rhyme with truant

Spanish Central: Translation of truant

Nglish: Translation of truant for Spanish Speakers

Britannica English: Translation of truant for Arabic Speakers