The term "delinquent" is defined as "deviant from the normal, expected behavior of somone." Therefore a delinquent person is someone who is not behaving in the normal manner that society expects him to behave. But what is delinquent to one person may not be considered delinquent to another. For example, a person may be delinquent for not paying his account on time. In legal terms there is no such thing as a delinquent person. If you want to refer to a person with a criminal record then that is what you refer to: a person with a criminal record, a person convicted of a misdemeanor, a person with a long rap sheet, a convicted felon, a registered sex offender, a convcted "-er," an inmate, or a condemned person.
No. A juvenile delinquent is not a legal definition it is a social one. In addition delinquency means 'failing in duty', which is an adult trait. By definition a juvenile has not attained adulthood therefore cannot be delinquent. A person may be delinquent in some duties but not in others.
A sentence with the word delinquent might be, "The child is turning out to be a juvenile delinquent." Another example might be, "The courts have deemed this person to be delinquent in paying their fines."
juvenile delinquent
A delinquent.
Juvenile Delinquent.
its basiclly the same as a trouble maker or a person who gets in a lot of trouble
Foster care is supervised care for delinquent or neglected children usually in an institution or substitute home.
A delinquent debt is a term used to indicate that an agreement for services and/or goods has not been honored. In other words, a person didn't pay their bill(s).
Delinquent tax returns are tax returns that have been filed late, or not at all; usually this incurs penalties and fees that increase over time, so it's best to pay your taxes fully and on time.
He is a delinquent.
because once a juvenile offender is arrested once and let out they are automatically labeled as a "criminal."
A delinquent juvenile is a young person who has committed a crime or violated a law. They may be subject to the juvenile justice system rather than the adult criminal justice system.