plural rabbles
1
a
: a disorganized or disorderly crowd of people : mob
Maybe the film's best stretch comes when the boys … race through the streets while singing "Born to Run," and inspire a rabble of unemployed factory men to join along.—David Ehrlich
Nobody wants political parties that behave like unruly rabbles.—Chris Bryant
b
: a group, class, or body regarded with contempt
… the whole of that vile rabble came sweeping off the hilltop and down the slope right past their hiding-place.—C. S. Lewis
c
: ordinary or common people lacking wealth, power, or social status
—usually used with the
In the vaudeville theaters the "refined" could, if they chose, sit safe from the rabble [=the masses] in the more expensive box and orchestra seats.—David Nasaw
Plagued by overflowing prisons and an irrepressible wave of crime, George III hit upon a cruel solution: ship the rabble off to the far ends of the earth …—James Atlas
In Elizabethan England, there were sumptuary laws to prevent members of the rabble from dressing above their station.—Rob Walker
2
: a disorganized or confused collection of things
The size of the Academy's official dictionary … showed its determination to eradicate the rabble of synonyms, onomatopoeias and vulgarities.—Graham Robb
The punch was as hard as any Ali ever took. When he rose, his thoughts were a rabble and his legs looked ready to do a Groucho Marx impersonation.—Hugh McIlvanney
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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