Indigent in a sentence as an adjective

Maybe it just seems that way to you because you do not think they have a reason to become indigent.

Healthcare for the indigent, and tool to make red state more appealing to business.

And the challenge remedy is not going to be much comfort to an indigent plaintiff as it's unlikely his lawyer is going to take that challenge on contingency.

Public hospitals, for instance, are required to provide indigent/uncompensated care.

His vision of success was helping people who were indigent, incorrigible or otherwise considered broken by society.

You are positing as axiomatic that subsidizing the indigent is an automatic good.

Subtle age discrimination, inability to interview and seem "normal" due to his disability, and the fact he's been out of work a while and seems indigent.

I think the idea is that it's very rare for the indigent to be plausibly charged with an exceedingly complicated crime which is expensive to defend against.

It's indeed possible that SF does a better job of this than Chicago and NYC, both of which see clusters of indigent people on the streets as a quality-of-life problem for residents.

If he made a choice to not work for the next 18 years, while becoming indigent and sliding into homelessness, that's not something to be solved by the American economy.

Huh?Sharecropping exists when landowners have limited access to capital, but extensive land holdings and abundant access to indigent labor.

That seems, to me, to be a much more fair and reasonable option than auctioning off these trivial amounts to the morally corrupt and destroying the lives of the indigent, elderly, or sick, as well as their families.

In many cases a direct housing subsidy would save taxpayers money on multiple levels, but we have large segments of the electorate that are emotionally driven by a refusal to help the indigent.

These students and ex-students felt in them the power to do great things, they had culture, knowledge, ability, they yearned for the life of action, its excitements and rewards, and yet there they were, doomed to spend heartbreaking years as indigent curates waiting to be appointed pastors, or as tutors in some noble household, where they were little better than superior domestics, or as famished writers dependent on the goodwill of an editor or a publisher.

Indigent definitions

adjective

poor enough to need help from others

See also: destitute impoverished necessitous needy poverty-stricken