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wagoner

[ UK /wˈæɡənɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈwæɡənɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the driver of a wagon

How To Use wagoner In A Sentence

  • These were the haunts of the pawn brokers and the money lenders, of wagoners and bootleg whiskey makers, of whores and pimps and opium dealers.
  • Ledford also faces related charges in Cherokee, Tulsa and Wagoner counties. KRIS LEDFORD
  • During the trip, Boone worked as a wagoner alongside a trader named John Findley who had traveled to the Native American villages in Ohio and beyond. History of American Women
  • Soho the Dog: as a wagoner would his mudheeldy wheesindonk As a wagoner would his mudheeldy wheesindonk
  • Porter Wagoner, the blond pompadoured, rhinestone-encrusted personification of Nashville tradition, host of the longest-running country-music variety show in TV history and mentor to Dolly Parton, died Sunday night of lung cancer. Steve Anderson: An American Music Treasure Gone: Porter Wagoner, 1927-2007
  • Unions between Spanish men and Indian women produced mestizo offspring, who grew into the artisans and laborers of colonial towns or the herdspeople and wagoners of the early countryside.
  • For peers and gints, quaysirs and galleyliers, fresk letties from the say and stale headygabblers, gaingangers and dudder wagoners, pullars off societies and pushers on rothmere’s homes. Finnegans Wake
  • They would meet wagons in the road, take the horses and leave the poor wagoner either swearing with rage or mute with astonishment. Cavalryman of the Lost Cause
  • ‘Okay, let's get going now,’ Sterling urged as he went up to the wagoner's seat, ready to take off.
  • The dear old 'wagoner's whip' has been replaced by a pert, perky squirt that will never stir the heart or brain of a future Ruth. A Book About Lawyers
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