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goer

[ US /ˈɡoʊɝ/ ]
[ UK /ɡˈə‍ʊɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone who leaves

How To Use goer In A Sentence

  • That proviso is a thoughtful message for young moviegoers. Disney's 'Princess and the Frog' is royally charming
  • Punters and racegoers have felt only a sense of deprivation through the snow and ice of recent weeks. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although the race, the last on the card, was a fairly ordinary event, it had great significance for Oliver, who was warmly greeted by racegoers.
  • The second is the gender division of work, she says, looking at the larger issue of why first generation schoolgoers in particular require an extraordinary amount of care and attention.
  • Not so much a summer scorcher, then, but a hot ticket that remains boisterously good fun for the undemanding multiplex-goers.
  • As such, the set was both heavy on the new material and encore-less, a sort of brilliant means of creating a Pavlovian effect on the assembled concert-goers.
  • Festival-goers began to drift off as the evening drew to an end.
  • But what Pete and Katrina can vouch for is a degree of comfort at their events that could convert the most hardened anti-festival goers.
  • While water and sand reflect UV rays to increase exposure, it's not just the beachgoer who's at risk. Science seeks ways to take sting out of sunburn
  • While it might be fair to assume that the average comic reader is something of a geek (however that term might be described), the same can't be said about the average cinemagoer. [GUEST POST] Gabriel McKee on Mark Millar's Kick-Ass...and Why it Stinks
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