Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
You were like a lost waif, far from her home.
Now she looked like nothing more than a stage waif.
The waif actually knew she was dead, but did not care.
The young one is a waif adopted as his son.
She's a waif, just a little girl, without home or family.
She was still a girl of sixteen, a lost little waif in a world not her own.
Maybe it was all too much for a 4-11, 82-pound waif.
Whether the waif heard at all he could not tell from the tail of his eye.
So we let ourselves in and settled down to waif.
I am a waif in spirit,' the woman said with dignity.
And then a beautiful blond waif had appeared before him.
I said this because what such a grown-up waif needs more than anything is something like a family.
The waif that you took in and raised as your own child."
These different waifs, already put in a safe place, could no longer be taken back by a rising sea.
She was small, slight, with the large searching eyes of a waif.
You were just a little bit of a thing, prettiest waif on the street.
And although scores of people turned up looking for a pet, new waifs were being brought in almost as quickly.
I am not a waif and never have been.
No one would take very much notice, or remember it for long, if a street waif simply disappeared.
That image faded quickly with the rise of the waif.
The waif took a step toward him, but Parry held her back.
Why else should he care about one human waif?
They had neglected this little waif long enough, getting the others settled in.
I looked away from her to the dying waif beneath the blanket.
"I'm a waif, remember, who'd heard little more than the name of, your people."