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Definition of caitiff in the Online Dictionary. Meaning of caitiff. Pronunciation of caitiff. Translations of caitiff. caitiff synonyms, caitiff antonyms. Information about caitiff in the free online English dictionary and encyclopedia. ... Noun 1. caitiff - a cowardly and despicable person...
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Lacking patrons or allies, holding no real power as a group, Caitiff are held in contempt by the Camarilla. The Sabbat's Caitiff are treated as a Clan; ...
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Caitiff - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Caitiff (literally a despicable coward or wretch) may mean: • a galley-slave in a Barbary bagnio • a Camarilla clanless character in Caitiff (World of Darkness) • A bandit in the Kingdom of Wu, pacif...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caitiff |
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The Caitiff Choir - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Definition of caitiff from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary with audio pronunciations, thesaurus, Word of the Day, and word games. ... Learn more about "Caitiff" and related topics at Britannica.com...
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Definition of caitiff at Dictionary.com with free online dictionary, pronunciation, synonyms, and translation. Word of the Day and Crossword Puzzles. ... Arnold had sped his caitiff flight. --W. Irving.
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Caitiff, also called Clanless, are vampires who do not belong to any clan. The term is traditionally used by the Camarilla. ... caitiff: Originally meaning a captive, by extension a wretched miserable person. It often expresses contempt and means a despicable wretch or villain.
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Synonyms for caitiff at Thesaurus.com with free online thesaurus, antonyms, and definitions. Dictionary and Word of the Day. ... caitiff - 10 thesaurus results...
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The Venus Flytrap now has three, or possibly four buds. It's still in its protective terrarium, because the buds are still tiny, but I have managed to photograph them. Behold: If you want ... Posted by Pandora Caitiff at 11:52 AM 3 comments ... Pandora Caitiff "Meddling kid" of the gender spectrum View my complete profile...
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The story behind the Weird Word 'caitiff'. ... As captives were not in the best of circumstances, caitiff began to mean a wretched or miserable person. Chaucer uses it several times in the Canterbury Tales, as in the Knight’s Tale: “And now I am so caitiff and so thrall / That he that is my mortal enemy / I serve him as...
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