Noun
His friends are just a bunch of deadbeats.
He was accused of being a deadbeat.
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Noun
Housing prices and rents are inflated by restrictive zoning laws, union work and pay scale mandates, excessive building codes and environmental requirements, litigation and planning process delays, anti-landlord policies that favor deadbeats and squatters, and the list goes on.—Adam B. Summers, Oc Register, 25 Apr. 2026 Housing prices and rents are inflated by restrictive zoning laws, union work and pay scale mandates, excessive building codes and environmental requirements, litigation and planning process delays, anti-landlord policies that favor deadbeats and squatters, and the list goes on.—Adam Summers, San Diego Union-Tribune, 24 Apr. 2026
Adjective
Debra and Pam married well — very well — until their money ran out because of their husbands’ medical issues, unpaid taxes, bad investments and deadbeat ways.—Oline H. Cogdill, Sun Sentinel, 25 June 2025 In cases where families sued, departments later used the information from those interviews to defend themselves in court, painting the deceased as mentally ill drug addicts and deadbeat parents in part to lower the cost of damages or settlements paid to families.—Brian Howey, Los Angeles Times, 12 Mar. 2024 See All Example Sentences for deadbeat