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Answer for the clue "Fan setting ", 9 letters:
bleachers

Alternative clues for the word bleachers

Word definitions for bleachers in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Bleachers is an American indie pop act based in New York City formed by Jack Antonoff , of bands Steel Train and Fun . Bleachers' pop music was heavily influenced by the 1980s and the high school-based films of John Hughes while still using modern production ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context US usually in the plural English) Seating, usually tiered, exposed to the elements, especially the sun, for spectators in outdoor venues. 2 (plural of bleacher English)

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. an outdoor grandstand without a roof; patrons are exposed to the sun as linens are when they are bleached

Usage examples of bleachers.

In couples and small groups, people walked away from their vehicles and headed for the brightly lighted bleachers.

Even as we walked past the front of the bleachers, dozens of Grandville locals were certain to be watching us.

She seemed to be studying the audience in the bleachers across from ours.

We both fell forward, grappling with each other, colliding with a few people below us, knocking them off their feet before we crashed down on the slick, wet bleachers.

Under my back, I felt the vibrations of all the shoes and boots and san dais and bare feet pounding their way down the bleachers.

I managed to plant one foot on the bottom row of the bleachers and spring off.

When we rounded the end of the bleachers, I had a clear view of Janks Field.

Through the bars on the other side, I saw a vague shape squirming on the ground in front of the bleachers.

The hearse remained motionless behind the other bleachers, shining its headlights at us.

I was still selling tickets when the cheers and whistles started inside and the whooping and stomping on those old wood bleachers drew even more people.

We built more bleachers, moved her into the biggest top we had, eleven hundred capacity, and it was always jammed.

He'd been reading books on Oriental philosophy and was spouting it solemnly over the lip of the tank one day when a pale woman on the bleachers stood up and asked him whether her fifteen-year-old son, who had run away months before, was alive or dead.

They paid their price and sat numbly in clumps on the bleachers waiting as long as it took for his show to begin.

He did it right there in front of Arty's tank with seven or eight hundred people in the bleachers watching.

He wore blue or brown leather for his workaday stumps, but he got a pair made of iridescent green satin, embroidered with silver vines, for wearing in the control booth at the top of the bleachers where he worked the sound-and-light board for Arty's show.