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dweller

[ UK /dwˈɛlɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈdwɛɫɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a person who inhabits a particular place

How To Use dweller In A Sentence

  • I only regret that I forgot to take my camera so you urban-dwellers could see the cruelty that they would like little baa-lambs to suffer.
  • So of course city-dwellers voted for someone who promised more government welfare.
  • Holding the chain railing, we followed our leader and had up-close encounters with yellow tails, sergeant majors, blue tang, trumpet fish, and other reef dwellers.
  • Through the lane down which the Dweller had passed we went as quickly as we could, coming at last to the space where the coria waited. The Moon Pool
  • A typical exchange of views between city-dwellers: nothing to get fazed about. COMPULSION
  • People like them will never be rural dwellers, just townees with a house in the country.
  • Such men are the dwellers in the halls of Circean senses; they can appreciate only the sensuous. The Continental Monthly, Vol. III, No. V, May, 1863 Devoted to Literature and National Policy
  • One of the most interesting of the pictographs pecked in the rock is a figure which, variously modified, is a common decoration on cliff-dweller pottery from the Verde valley region to the ruins of the Archeological Expedition to Arizona in 1895 Seventeenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1895-1896, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1898, pages 519-744
  • The hill-dwellers of Uttaranchal have long felt unhappy under the thumb of the Uttar Pradesh plainsmen.
  • While both suffered sun damage, the city dwellers aged the most. Times, Sunday Times
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