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{{Unreferenced|article|date=February 2007}}
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{{wiktionarypar|tramp}}
'''Tramp''' may refer to:
* Some sorts of '''[[vagrancy (people)|vagrant]]''': see below
* Tramp, The social elite lifestyle magazine, which is aimed at the jetset and trendy social elite.
* [[Tramp nightclub]], a fashionable London nightclub.
* Tramp, a promiscuous woman.
* TranP, an adherent of [[Transnational progressivism]].
* [[TRAMP!]], an underground Manchester club night

'''In entertainment:'''
* ''[[A Tramp Abroad]]'', an 1880 non-fiction book by Mark Twain about a walking tour of Europe.
* [[The Tramp]], the iconic character played by [[Charlie Chaplin]] during the [[silent film]] era, as well as a 1915 short film in which he appeared.
* [[The Tramp (song)]], one of Joe Hill's most well-known songs
* [[Tramp (Lady and the Tramp)]], a character in Disney's movie [[Lady and the Tramp]].

'''Other uses:'''
* [[Czech Tramping]], the name of youth and social-culture movement in Czechoslovakia since 1918.
* Tramp, a slang term for a "loose" woman or [[prostitute]] in American English; a harlot.
* [[Tramp metal]], pieces of metal that occur as an unwelcome impurity in other material, such as waste paper for recycling.
* [[Tramp steamer]], a seagoing vessel which undertakes voyages for hire, as opposed to one making regular runs on a specified route.
* [[Tramping]], a commonly used New Zealand term for a hike of at least one overnight stay in the outdoors.

----
A '''tramp''' (at least in [[British English]] usage) is an [[vagrant]] or [[itinerant]] who travels from place to place, traditionally "tramping", that is, walking.

While tramps may do odd jobs from time to time, they do not seek out regular work and support themselves by other means i.e. begging or scavenging. This is in contrast to:
* [[hobo]]s who travel from place to place (often by catching rides on freight trains) looking for work.
* [[Schnorrer (Yiddish)|schnorrers]], who travel from city to city begging. "Schnorrer" is a [[Yiddish]] term.
Both terms, "tramp" and "hobo" (and the distinction between them), were in common use between the 1880s and the 1940s, and were not limited to the [[Great Depression]].
[[Image:Trampker12.jpg|thumb|A homeless person.]]

Like "hobo" and "[[bum]]", "tramp" is considered somewhat rude in [[American English]] usage, having been subsumed in more polite contexts by words such as "[[homeless]] person" or "transient". It remains relatively more common in [[British English]], but has also been somewhat replaced with "homeless person".

A [[vacilando]], a kind of tramp for whom the travel as such is more important than the destination

{{disambig}}
[[Category:Itinerant living]]
[[cs:Tramp]]
[[de:Tramp]]
[[nl:Landloper]]
[[sv:Luffare]]

Revision as of 09:10, 22 July 2007


Tramp may refer to:

  • Some sorts of vagrant: see below
  • Tramp, The social elite lifestyle magazine, which is aimed at the jetset and trendy social elite.
  • Tramp nightclub, a fashionable London nightclub.
  • Tramp, a promiscuous woman.
  • TranP, an adherent of Transnational progressivism.
  • TRAMP!, an underground Manchester club night

In entertainment:

Other uses:

  • Czech Tramping, the name of youth and social-culture movement in Czechoslovakia since 1918.
  • Tramp, a slang term for a "loose" woman or prostitute in American English; a harlot.
  • Tramp metal, pieces of metal that occur as an unwelcome impurity in other material, such as waste paper for recycling.
  • Tramp steamer, a seagoing vessel which undertakes voyages for hire, as opposed to one making regular runs on a specified route.
  • Tramping, a commonly used New Zealand term for a hike of at least one overnight stay in the outdoors.

A tramp (at least in British English usage) is an vagrant or itinerant who travels from place to place, traditionally "tramping", that is, walking.

While tramps may do odd jobs from time to time, they do not seek out regular work and support themselves by other means i.e. begging or scavenging. This is in contrast to:

  • hobos who travel from place to place (often by catching rides on freight trains) looking for work.
  • schnorrers, who travel from city to city begging. "Schnorrer" is a Yiddish term.

Both terms, "tramp" and "hobo" (and the distinction between them), were in common use between the 1880s and the 1940s, and were not limited to the Great Depression.

A homeless person.

Like "hobo" and "bum", "tramp" is considered somewhat rude in American English usage, having been subsumed in more polite contexts by words such as "homeless person" or "transient". It remains relatively more common in British English, but has also been somewhat replaced with "homeless person".

A vacilando, a kind of tramp for whom the travel as such is more important than the destination