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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Wagoner

Wagoner \Wag"on*er\, n.

  1. One who conducts a wagon; one whose business it is to drive a wagon.

  2. (Astron.) The constellation Charles's Wain, or Ursa Major. See Ursa major, under Ursa.

Wiktionary
wagoner

alt. 1 (context astronomy English) The constellation Auriga. 2 (surname A=An occupational from=occupations dot=) for a wagoner. 3 An unincorporated community in Indiana. 4 A city, county seat and county in Oklahoma. 5 An unincorporated community in West Virginia. n. 1 (context astronomy English) The constellation Auriga. 2 (surname A=An occupational from=occupations dot=) for a wagoner. 3 An unincorporated community in Indiana. 4 A city, county seat and county in Oklahoma. 5 An unincorporated community in West Virginia.

WordNet
wagoner

n. the driver of a wagon [syn: waggoner]

Gazetteer
Wagoner, OK -- U.S. city in Oklahoma
Population (2000): 7669
Housing Units (2000): 3152
Land area (2000): 6.962781 sq. miles (18.033518 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 6.962781 sq. miles (18.033518 sq. km)
FIPS code: 77850
Located within: Oklahoma (OK), FIPS 40
Location: 35.955501 N, 95.377938 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 74467
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Wagoner, OK
Wagoner
Wagoner -- U.S. County in Oklahoma
Population (2000): 57491
Housing Units (2000): 23174
Land area (2000): 562.914093 sq. miles (1457.940747 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 28.072040 sq. miles (72.706247 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 590.986133 sq. miles (1530.646994 sq. km)
Located within: Oklahoma (OK), FIPS 40
Location: 35.970541 N, 95.544827 W
Headwords:
Wagoner
Wagoner, OK
Wagoner County
Wagoner County, OK
Wikipedia
Wagoner

Wagoner may refer to:

Wagoner (surname)

Wagoner is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Betty Wagoner (1930–2006), All-American Girls Professional Baseball League pitcher
  • David Wagoner (born 1926), American poet
  • George Chester Robinson Wagoner (1863–1946), American politician, U.S. Representative from Missouri
  • Harold E. Wagoner (1905–1986), American ecclesiastical architect
  • Kenneth S. Wagoner (1911–2000), American professor and physiological skin scientist
  • Mark Wagoner (born 1971), American politician, in Ohio
  • Murray Van Wagoner (1898–1986), American politician, Governor of Michigan
  • Philip Dakin Wagoner (1876–1962), American businessman, chairman of the Underwood Typewriter Company
  • Porter Wagoner (1927–2007), American country music singer
  • Rick Wagoner (born 1953), American businessman, former Chairman and CEO of General Motors
  • William Van Wagoner (1870–after 1920), American bicycle racer, designer of the Van Wagoner
  • Winfred E. Wagoner (1888–1948), American educator

Related surname:

  • Joe Waggonner (1918–2007), American politician, in Louisiana
  • Willie Waggonner (1905–1976), Louisiana sheriff

Usage examples of "wagoner".

My master is expecting myself and the other wagoners to return to Kilbur with the empty wagons, after the cargo and the Ranjana were put on the boats.

It took Milo over two weeks to sort out the shambles of that last attack, to replace the sappers and cooks, sanitarians and smiths, artificiers and wagoners killed or wounded or missing.

It took Milo over two weeks to sort out the shambles of that last attack, to replace the sappers and cooks, sanitarians and smiths, artificers and wagoners killed or wounded or missing.

Many girls who had been leading drab lives on farms in other parts of the county gravitated to the inns that lined Hell Street to listen for the bells of the incoming wagoners.

Yonville, but about this time a cross-road was made which joins that of Abbeville to that of Amiens, and is occasionally used by the Rouen wagoners on their way to Flanders.

Fort Bridger the wagoners replenished their supplies and traded their tired oxen for rested ones.

The bidding went quickly to fifteen hundred guilders with only the wagoner and the Buzzard in the race.

Hop called to him, but the wagoner scurried away across the Parade back towards the town.

Things were pretty confused, congested, and chaotic but Wil, Wagoner, James and the town's part-time police officer, Harry Duggy, with some help from me, were able to clear the hall.

He began to be angry, and to shout Arabella down, but by this time a couple of chairmen, abandoning their empty vehicle, came across the square, expressing, in strong Hibernian accents, their willingness to champion the lady, and their desire to know whether the wagoner wanted to have his cork drawn.

Arabella told the chairmen briskly that she would have no fighting, bade the wagoner observe the obstruction against which one of his rear wheels was jammed, herself went to the horse’s head, and began to back him.

There was no way to reckon how many tons of supplies and powder had been surreptitiously cast by the way by wagoners trying to lighten their loads, or how many draft horses and mules had been killed or crippled in heaving to drag mired wagons and gun carriages out of the slimy, sucking mud.

It took Milo over two weeks to sort out the shambles of that last attack, to replace the sappers and cooks, sanitarians and smiths, artificiers and wagoners killed or wounded or missing.

The god of the wagoners was a small, white image, rough-hewn and only a foot or so in height.

This suited me, but I did not want him to seem so suspiciously afraid of me before the wagoners, only to respect my position as healer, as they would think fitting.