Many of them are also lazybones who think you just need money to make more money.
From the businessweek.com
I don't like to see those lazybones staying at home, skying abroad and going shopping with our money.
From the guardian.co.uk
The fast intercutting seems ill-suited to a songwriter who carefully cultivated the image of a slow-moving Southern lazybones.
From the online.wsj.com
Now a start-up called Sonicbox is making it easy for lazybones like me to tune in to the rest of the world from the comfort of home.
From the time.com
It's a massive coincidence, don't you think, that the one person who got thrown off the JPYA course, is also the one rank self-publicist, and the one self-confessed lazybones.
From the independent.co.uk
More examples
A lazy person
Matt Wells is a Canadian television personality and a former presenter on music television station MuchMore. He began in national television on MuchMusic in 2002 as host of the show Going Coastal, followed by Where you at Baby?.
Lazybones is a 1935 British film directed by Michael Powell. It was made as a Quota quickie.
Lazybones or "Lazy Bones" is a Tin Pan Alley song written in 1933, with lyrics by Johnny Mercer and music by Hoagy Carmichael. Major hit records at the time of introduction included Ted Lewis and Mildred Bailey. ...
A person who is lazy; one who is inactive and without ambition
An instrument like a pair of tongs, for old or very fat people to take any thing from the ground without stooping.