v. rare. [f. VAGRANT sb. + -IZE.] † a. trans. To arrest as a vagrant. Obs. b. To reduce to the condition of a vagrant. In quot. absol.

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1797.  Mrs. A. M. Bennett, Beggar Girl (1813), I. 21. Set off to the next justice of the peace, for the purpose of getting the whole set vagrantized.

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1893.  Liverpool Daily Post, 22 Dec., 4/10. The result is rather to permanently vagrantize—if one may coin a verb for the occasion—instead of inculcating … independent effort.

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