Folk in a sentence as a noun

* You seem to get less hassle from folk you reject.

The rich folk seemed more willing to learn it, try it, and logic out the problem.

I've had a policy of paying folk I interview for a while.

"Just raising yields" has helped save millions of poor folk in third world countries from starvation.

"According to folk belief, it's the distance from the tip of Henry I's nose to the end of his thumb.

Contrary to what this story suggests, it was usually the rich folk who got on their hands and knees beside me and pounded nails.

Most people infact, even technical folk, go through their entire lives without knowing the forest even exists.

For few reasons:* If you actually look at the total cost of hiring, adding in paying folk isn't actually that much more money.

It opens up a place where folk can suddenly experiment and play with something that they might have been afraid of previously.

One on the border region of legality below the decent folk morality threshold.

The present education conventions fade from their minds, and unhampered by tradition, we work our own good will upon a grateful and responsive rural folk.

> This is an abominationThat's pretty rude.> Do we honestly need a "framework" to use the background-color and float properties?This story is on the front page, so there are obviously some folk who would.

It makes you wonder if those of us in wealthy democracies are actually experiencing a peculiarly 21st century form of passive aggressive oppression where we may be "free" but monitored and essentially feel helpless and the fact that these unknown hackers are able to duck and evade the same forces that can hunt and **** terrorists with disregard of sovereignty makes them look like folk heroes.

Folk definitions

noun

people in general (often used in the plural); "they're just country folk"; "folks around here drink moonshine"; "the common people determine the group character and preserve its customs from one generation to the next"

See also: folks

noun

a social division of (usually preliterate) people

See also: tribe

noun

people descended from a common ancestor; "his family has lived in Massachusetts since the Mayflower"

See also: family kinfolk kinsfolk sept phratry

noun

the traditional and typically anonymous music that is an expression of the life of people in a community