Renegade in a sentence as a noun

The members of the new tribe greet the renegade monkey by beating it to a bloody pulp.

The most renegade of the lot could be Libya and Iraq, the two that have actually been attacked.

A renegade "&" in C++ code, instead of value of pointer we were accessing its address .

This is the same reason some people love being "the only x" -- it confirms their identity as a renegade.

Now, once every few years without fail, a renegade monkey leaves his tribe and tries to join another one.

Renegade in a sentence as a verb

And yet those renegade monkeys, those heretic monkeys if you will, are a providence from nature.

[...] But, in light of that victory, his renegade confidence has become an assured superiority.

Where interestingly it is used both by the dystopian government and by Robert de Niro's renegade heating engineer.

Hawking's point, though, was that it only takes one renegade to start on the track of deliberate genetic improvement, then they'll outcompete and displace the unimproved humans.

I am not referring to CoinMD so much but this paragraph..."Imagine a future where renegade doctors shun licensing laws and practice medicine over the internet.

Renegade in a sentence as an adjective

On the other hand, if I were a senior official in the US Government, I sure would want to be the first to know all about renegade gatherings in countries which I do not approve of.

I still play Eve everyday, once you get past the menial tasks, you can have some real fun with this game being a drug runner, miner or just straight up renegade roaming the infinite environment.

In this nascent stage, computer science, with all the renegade hackers and developers, is still a necessary occurrence when new languages and frameworks are invented.

One of the things I did there was to join a renegade band of engineers who were off in Palo Alto working on a technology that nobody within Sun could see any possible use for.

Witness my favorite renegade intellectual, Robert PirsigI went to high school with a classmate who used to have the Pirsig family over for dinner fairly regularly.

Renegade definitions

noun

someone who rebels and becomes an outlaw

noun

a disloyal person who betrays or deserts his cause or religion or political party or friend etc.

See also: deserter apostate turncoat recreant ratter

verb

break with established customs

See also: rebel

adjective

having deserted a cause or principle; "some provinces had proved recreant"; "renegade supporters of the usurper"

See also: recreant