Bandito vs Bandolero - What's the difference?
bandito | bandolero |
A bandit, particularly of the type associated with Mexico
* {{quote-news, year=1994, date=March 18, author=Patrick Griffin, title=Let's Ban Smoking Outright, work=Chicago Reader
, passage=But I was at an age when a stinking twist of additive-soaked tobacco wrapped in brown paper could transform me into a kind of pale, stubble-free Irish bandito . }}
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=September 19, author=Douglas Martin, title=Gene Savoy, Flamboyant Explorer of Ruins, Dies at 80, work=New York Times
, passage=Gene Savoy, an amateur archaeologist whose success in finding some 40 Incan and pre-Incan ruins in Peru was matched by a flair for self-promotion that drew on his tales of peril in the jungle, his bandito mustache and Stetson hat, and a retinue of would-be explorers who paid to accompany him, died on Sept. 11 at his home in Reno, Nev. He was 80. }}
----
An outlaw or bandit, specially of Spain or Mexico.
* 1984 , James W. Daddysman, The Matamoros trade: Confederate commerce, diplomacy, and intrigue
* 1997 , Marcel Montecino, Sacred Heart
As nouns the difference between bandito and bandolero
is that bandito is a bandit, particularly of the type associated with mexico while bandolero is an outlaw or bandit, specially of spain or mexico.bandito
English
Noun
(en-noun)citation
citation
bandolero
English
Noun
(en noun)- Mexico was torn by revolutionary turmoil, and the eastern border state of Tamaulipas was unable to control the bandoleros who plundered and murdered...
- A bandolero was stuffing the bloodstained pesos into his shirt.