society > morality > moral evil > wickedness > roguery, knavery, or rascalry > 			[noun]		 > rogue, knave, or rascal
1535    D. Lindsay  4254  				Tak me an rackles rubyatour, Ane theif, ane tyrane, or ane tratour, Of everie vyce the plant.
1568    D. Lindsay Answer Kingis Flyting l. 48 in   		(1931)	 I. 103  				For, lyke ane boisteous Bull, ye rin and ryde Royatouslie lyke ane rude Rubeatour.
1568						 (?a1513)						    W. Dunbar in  W. T. Ritchie  		(1928)	 II. 149  				Sa mony tratouris, Sa mony rubeatouris [a1586 Maitl. F. rebiatouris] Wtin this land [was nevir hard nor sene].
a1585    P. Hume Flyting with Montgomerie 		(Tullibardine)	 ix. 60 in   		(2000)	 I. 173  				Purspeiller, hen steiller, cat keiller, now I knaw þe, Rubiatour, fornicatour by natour, foul fa the.
?a1600						 (    R. Sempill Legend Bischop St. Androis in  J. Cranstoun  		(1891)	 I. xlv. 357  				For laik of rowme, that rubiature Bespewit vp the moderator.
 
1814    J. Galt Watch-house  ii. i, in   I. 60  				They a' barkit at me, like sae many rabiators.
1825    J. Jamieson  Suppl. at Rubiature  				He comes out on me roaring like a rubiator, Roxb[urghshire].
1832    in  A. Wilson  		(1844)	 314  				The highland rabeatours..are here; we're a' ruined and ravished!
1887    J. Service  258  				‘The auld rabiawtor!’ quo he,..‘my gear is traiket, there's a wadset on my lands, and my wine-caskets are dung a' to staves.’
1999     		(Nexis)	 27 July 7  				Robert De Niro, sustained by his inherently flagitious appearance appropriate for one who is such a rabiator, moved us to assess our own meaningless lives.