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Tourist's leader
Answer for the clue "Tourist's leader ", 5 letters:
guide
Alternative clues for the word guide
Usage examples of guide.
Which she could do: better to convoy with riders you knew than ones the truckers picked, and Aby was an experienced senior guide whose recommendation counted.
Then someone was helping her, telling her in some strange accent to bring him in here, hands guiding her shoulders, leading her into a tent with a soft glow of lamplight.
Their skilful guide, changing his plan of operations, then conducted the army by a longer circuit, but through a fertile territory, towards the head of the Euphrates, where the infant river is reduced to a shallow and accessible stream.
His speech was very moderate, although it might have appeared that he was guided by some acrimonious feeling in selecting Lord Glenelg for attack.
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Kero thought, as she guided Hellsbane afoot through the darkness, stumbling now and again over a root or a rock.
That is why, if you are guided by me, dear Agaric, you will not engage the Church in this adventure.
Nabby, appraising the politicians she encountered in New York, including Governor George Clinton, surmised there were few for whom personal aggrandizement was not the guiding motivation.
Bundesgrenzschutz a force of West German riot police who guard airports, embassies and the border and an elderly Englishman in a curious nautical uniform worn by the British Frontier Service, which acts as guides for ail British army patrols on land, air and river.
Houston while the airmobile purred along contentedly, guided by intermittent streams of binary being directed up at it from somewhere below.
The Akka guide strode beside him, seemingly unperturbed by this change of plan.
The almanac at that time was a kind of periodical as well as a guide to natural phenomena and the weather.
You need to guide us to Amicus and to tell us how and when the Red Cadre jumped you.
The result was that when the newcomer left the hotel with the cicerone, a man detached himself from the rest of the idlers, and without having been seen by the traveler, and appearing to excite no attention from the guide, followed the stranger with as much skill as a Parisian police agent would have used.
In arguing that feelings should guide man on how to live, Rousseau may be seen as one of the originators of the romantic movement.