[
US
/ˈbaɪkɝz/
]
[ UK /bˈaɪkəz/ ]
[ UK /bˈaɪkəz/ ]
NOUN
- originally a British youth subculture that evolved out of the teddy boys in the 1960s; wore black leather jackets and jeans and boots; had greased hair and rode motorcycles and listened to rock'n'roll; were largely unskilled manual laborers
How To Use bikers In A Sentence
- A gaggle of brawny bikers revs their choppers out front.
- The farm is a good base for mountain bikers and walkers. Times, Sunday Times
- It is particularly popular with ‘born-again’ bikers - older motorcyclists who buy high-powered machines in a bid to recapture the thrills of their youth.
- It's a region already popular both with casual and mountain bikers who don't have to contend with busy traffic.
- Just so you know, about 80 per cent of bikers have long hair.
- This isn’t because of some desire to protect locals-only knowledge (if the number of other dog-walkers, mountain bikers, and equestrians is any indicator, these are far from secret trails), I was just following the group blindly and honestly don’t know where I was in greater detail than “Redmond, east of the Sammamish river.” The Trails of Redmond « PubliCola
- All4's new series takes an alternative look at bikers. The Sun
- PC Steve Bushby, a police motorcyclist for 19 years, challenged the perception that bikers were overwhelmingly to blame for accidents.
- So, the bikers party at the River Bottom Saloon and camp in trucks and tents behind it.
- Think of it as a ski chalet for mountain bikers. Times, Sunday Times