How To Use Wayfarer In A Sentence

  • Alas, the joint was shut, and there would be no refreshment for the parched 21st-century wayfarer.
  • I like you so much --" He outstretches his arm towards the motionless, beloved wayfarer. Under Fire: the story of a squad
  • New wayfarers looking at these travel brochures are eco-tourists and spring-break students.
  • The villa and its grounds had attracted no other wayfarers; the ruined stables would be comfortable enough.
  • In July, local police had to save wayfarers four times.
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  • For instance, in recommending a certain kind of quickset fence, he insists upon it as one of its advantages -- that it will not readily ignite under the torch of the mischievous wayfarer: "Naturale sepimentum," says he, "quod obseri solet virgultis aut spinis, _praetereuntis lascivi non metuet facem_. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 20, No. 572, October 20, 1832
  • On Jebel Barkal's pinnacle—partially covered in gold leaf to bedazzle wayfarers—the black pharaoh ordered his name inscribed.
  • The footsore pilgrim of old, the wayfarer half frozen from the storm, the tongue-tied lover dropping nervously by, might or might not be glad to hear it.
  • The biblical hero of hospitality, Abraham, had a tent that was open to all four directions, welcoming wayfarers from all sides, of all sorts, at all times.
  • It could be by helping someone needy, whether it is a relative, a neighbour, a wayfarer, an orphan, a lady waiting to get married, or a student.
  • The Morning Benders 'new music video for "Promises," off their sophomore effort Big Echo, doesn't flex that kind of Rolodex muscle, but it does portray kids in Wayfarers drinking martinis and getting ready for what might as well be their own rendition of Barefoot in the Park. The latest from teenvogue.com
  • The physicians at first laughed at the unknown wayfarer.
  • Here they lived in splendour, keeping open house; no passing wayfarer, however humble, need miss a welcome if he cared to claim it. The Fairies and the Christmas Child
  • Through the closed windows came the occasional ‘peep’ of a fogbound wayfarer whistling for a hansom.
  • You abuse your powers by stealing from travelers, and you make this forest even more perilous for harmless wayfarers!
  • Here I collect a toll from wayfarers which once would have been remitted to the temple of Amon once a year, but now is sent directly to the Roman prefect!
  • It was surrounded with a wall of peperino, supporting at intervals vases and statues; and on the outside were semicircular stone seats for the benefit of weary wayfarers. Roman Mosaics Or, Studies in Rome and Its Neighbourhood
  • They would "stick up" an occasional wayfarer for his "cush," and they carried "canisters" and sometimes fired them off, but these things do not signify the cutting of ice. The Prince and Betty
  • At the French villa that he purchased in 1926 and which served as his primary residence until his death in 1965, Maugham entertained scores of friends and wayfarers in Gatsbyesque style.
  • The ‘Hungry Rock’ road from Coolaney to Skreen is a short cut through the mountains and wayfarers should always remember to take enough provisions to ward off the supernatural demon which often caused severe hunger pangs.
  • More active air, a matutinal distant cock, ecclesiastical clocks at various points, avine music, the isolated tread of an early wayfarer, the visible diffusion of the light of an invisible luminous body, the first golden limb of the resurgent sun perceptible low on the horizon. Ulysses
  • On the opposite side of the road stretches a long, flat meadow, or "polder," up to the little village which nestles so snugly around its tall church tower; the latter fulfilling also the purpose of a beacon, lit by night, to guide the wayfarer on sea and land; scene of tireless industry, comfortable prosperity, and smiling peace. ... Pictures Every Child Should Know A Selection of the World's Art Masterpieces for Young People
  • On the first point: although Christ was a comprehensor, and therefore blessed in the enjoyment of God, he was nevertheless a wayfarer in respect of the passibility of nature, while subject to nature. Nature and Grace: Selections from the Summa Theologica of Thomas Aquinas
  • I am a wayfarer, and I am not ready to settle down in one place for good.
  • Heaton Mersey Village visited Wayfarers and scored 142 all out, a total they successfully defended bowling out Wayfarers for 112.
  • Dressed in battered, kneeless Levi's, gym shoes, and a baggy windcheater, he gives no concession to vanity, in contrast to the black-clad, Wayfarer-wearing hipsters who are cruising Soho looking for double espressos.
  • The people of the desert landscape are wayfarers and bandits.
  • We prep the boat (well, mainly she does, as I say it's a different set up to the Wayfarer I normally sail).
  • Of medium height, stocky, tattooed, unsmiling, with eyes concealed by Wayfarers under a black leather porkpie hat, Rojas was a badass Eastsider. Shortcut Man
  • The villa and its grounds had attracted no other wayfarers; the ruined stables would be comfortable enough.
  • Good manners demanded the disclaimer of hunger from the wayfarer, but the geography of the Colorado Plateau made it an obvious lie. A THIEF OF TIME
  • Through the closed windows came the occasional ‘peep’ of a fogbound wayfarer whistling for a hansom.
  • From time immemorial our human race has been called a race of wanderers and wayfarers, a restless people forever setting forth in pursuit of a better life.
  • Unlike the medieval or Renaissance wayfarers before them, however, these contemporary women are sitting in a car (a red Ford Explorer) in a snowstorm.
  • It hinted at protection, fortification, in an armed way that conveyed grim strength to the approaching wayfarer. GOTHIC PURSUIT
  • Turning from the still, moonlit sheet, the silent reeds, the clear mimicker in the slumbrous wood, the two wayfarers plunged into the darkness beneath the spreading branches of the oak-trees. Audrey
  • Each of these visions of God belongs to the gift of understanding; the first, to the gift of understanding in its state of perfection, as possessed in heaven; the second, to the gift of understanding in its state of inchoation, as possessed by wayfarers. Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province
  • Not a raccoon nor a muskrat is the wayfarer likely to meet with here to-night; but the gray rat of civilization is to be dimly discerned, as he lopes along the gutters in his nightly prowl. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 121, November, 1867
  • There on the doorstop, drenched and dripping in the darkness, stood a miserably bedraggled Jewish wayfarer.
  • From time to time, as they hurried on, they encountered, and made wide detours to escape contact with knots of wayfarers -- men debased and begrimed, with dreary and slatternly women, arm in arm, zigzaging widely across the sidewalks, chorusing with sodden voices the burden of some popularized ballad. The Black Bag
  • The cardsharper lays down the twenty-four cards shown in the illustration, and invites the innocent wayfarer to try his luck or skill by seeing which of them can first score thirty-one, or drive his opponent beyond, in the following manner: -- The Canterbury Puzzles And Other Curious Problems
  • He was, however, a wayfarer on account of the passibility of His body, in respect of which He was Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province
  • From time immemorial our human race has been called a race of wanderers and wayfarers, a restless people forever setting forth in pursuit of a better life.
  • That is also when the omnipresent stray dogs are more interested in their siesta than in chasing hapless wayfarers.
  • (I talked like a fool, I know; it was like asking a casual wayfarer in East Ham whether that by the kerb is the Moscow express. Old Junk
  • We've planted every kind of native tree you could think of in a hedge, including crab apple and wayfarer tree.
  • a solitary wayfarer in this deserted street.
  • To cross the narrow isthmus connecting the peninsula of the Peloponnesus to the rest of Greece, wayfarers had to shuffle in single file along a dangerous, cliffside trail, braving crumbling ledges and scree.
  • After travel, the wayfarer's home is not the same anymore.
  • They made good progress and on the first night stopped at one of the wayfarers' inns that were stationed at convenient day intervals along the most used roads.
  • Of medium height, stocky, tattooed, unsmiling, with eyes concealed by Wayfarers under a black leather porkpie hat, Rojas was a badass Eastsider. Shortcut Man
  • Another reference is also made to them being like lost wayfarers, tossed about by vicious storms; in an earlier reference these storms pushed the ships around in circles, hindering their progress.
  • Then viator (though it sounds all right) is doubtful; it has too much, perhaps, the sense of wayfarer? Vailima Letters
  • For instance, in recommending a certain kind of quickset fence, he insists upon it, as one of its advantages, that it will not readily ignite under the torch of the mischievous wayfarer: "Naturale sepimentum," says he, "quod obseri solet virgultis aut spinis, The Caesars
  • Early cars lacked such refinements as a fuel gauge, but they did come with the tiny, wrap-around windscreen that was as cool as a pair of Ray-Ban Wayfarers.

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