English to Greek Meaning of castaway - ναυαγός


Castaway :
ναυαγός

ναυαγός, παρίας, απόβλητος

αποτυχημένος, ναυαγός, αμαρτωλός, κακός, απόβλητος, αφήνω στην άκρη

ναυαγόςναυαγούς
Facebook Twitter Linkedin Share More
Definitions of castaway in English
Noun(1) a person who is rejected (from society or home(2) a shipwrecked person
Examples of castaway in English
(1) Defoe based his hero on a real-life castaway - Alexander Selkirk, a Scottish sailor who was abandoned on the Juan Fernandez islands off Chile in 1704 after an argument with his ship's Captain.(2) a castaway on a desert island(3) Remember the story of castaway Robinson Crusoe?(4) It's a chance to escape the hectic pace of modern day life, but it seems no-one is keen to emulate the original castaway and spend a week on a desert island.(5) Thus Severin hires an old sailing boat to recapture the experience of an early Caribbean castaway , although the vessel bears scant resemblance to the little skiff that carried the subject of his imagined reconstruction.(6) Their lives are calm, to put it mildly, until they take in a young Polish castaway , who washes up unconscious on their beach.(7) He shocked them by speaking their own language and telling them that he was a maroon rather than a castaway .(8) After surviving their first two years on an uncharted Pacific island, our seven stranded castaways continue to ponder and pine after the day they'll be rescued from their tropic island nest.(9) Mortelier has noted references to the Auckland Islands group in the adventure stories of Jules Verne, and has drawn parallels between the true experiences of Raynal and co and the fictional antics of Jules Verne's castaways .(10) Shipwrecked sailors, castaways , and that famous case some time back where a bunch of people were in a plane crash?(11) The castaways had been isolated so long that it was a miracle they weren't even more dysfunctional.(12) If we were to be castaways on a desert island, these are the goods we would pack by the caseload.(13) They also knew that castaways could be dangerous; the survivors of a Portuguese wreck 100 years earlier had horrified the Xhosa by turning to cannibalism.(14) Looking for the consolation prize of a seal cull in Carnley Harbour in the Auckland Islands group, Captain Thomas Musgrave and the mate Francois Raynal were accompanied by three other sailors - and soon-to-be castaways .(15) Among them is Riddick, a convicted criminal whom the other castaways put in chains out of fear for what he might do.(16) This hybrid of history and travel writing explores the world of castaways , adventurers and indigenous go-betweens that lay behind Daniel Defoe's famous 18 th-century story Robinson Crusoe.
Related Phrases of castaway
(1) cast away ::
ναυαγώ
Synonyms
Adjective
3. stranded ::
απομεμονωμένος
4. aground ::
καθισμένος
Noun
5. pariah ::
παρίας
6. outcast ::
απόβλητος
Verb
7. chuck out ::
τσοκ έξω
8. put away ::
αποταμιεύω
9. toss ::
τινάσσω
10. dispose ::
διαθέτω
11. throw away ::
πετάω
12. discard ::
απορρίπτω
13. cast out ::
ρίχνει έξω
14. fling ::
ρίψιμο
15. toss out ::
πετάξτε έξω
17. cast aside ::
θέτω στην άκρη
18. toss away ::
πετάξει μακριά
Different Forms
castaway, castaways
English to Greek Dictionary: castaway

Meaning and definitions of castaway, translation in Greek language for castaway with similar and opposite words. Also find spoken pronunciation of castaway in Greek and in English language.

Tags for the entry 'castaway'

What castaway means in Greek, castaway meaning in Greek, castaway definition, examples and pronunciation of castaway in Greek language.

Learn Prepositions by Photos
Commonly confused words
form of verbs
Learn 300+ TOEFL words
Fill in the blanks
Topic Wise Words
Learn 3000+ common words
Words Everyday
Most Searched Words
GRE words
Android App
iPhone App
Chrome Extension

Blog List

Topic Wise Words

Learn 3000+ Common Words

Learn Common GRE Words

Learn Words Everyday

Your Favorite Words
Currently you do not have any favorite word. To make a word favorite you have to click on the heart button.
Your Search History