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- Dictionaryrenegade/ˈrɛnɪɡeɪd/
noun
- 1. a person who deserts and betrays an organization, country, or set of principles: "an agent who later turns out to be a renegade"
adjective
- 1. having treacherously changed allegiance: "a renegade bodyguard"
verb
- 1. become a renegade: archaic "Johnson had renegaded from the Confederacy"
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a person who has changed their feelings of support and duty from one political, religious, national, etc. group to a new one: A band of renegades had captured the prince and were holding him to ransom. Synonyms. apostate formal. turncoat disapproving. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Supporters, members & defenders. advocate. allyship.
A renegade is a person who has deserted their cause or defied convention; they're rebels and sometimes outlaws, or even traitors. A long, long time ago, a renegade was a Christian person who decided to become Muslim.
The meaning of RENEGADE is a deserter from one faith, cause, or allegiance to another. How to use renegade in a sentence.
A renegade is a person who abandons the religious, political, or philosophical beliefs that he or she used to have, and accepts opposing or different beliefs. He has shown himself to be a renegade without respect for the rule of law.
Renegade definition: a person who deserts a party or cause for another.. See examples of RENEGADE used in a sentence.
Renegade definition: One who rejects a religion, cause, allegiance, or group for another; a deserter.
1. One who rejects a religion, cause, allegiance, or group for another; a deserter. 2. An outlaw; a rebel. adj. Of, relating to, or resembling a renegade; traitorous. intr.v. ren·e·gad·ed, ren·e·gad·ing, ren·e·gades. To become a deserter or an outlaw.