Crossword clues for fairgoer
fairgoer
Wiktionary
n. A person who is attending a fair.
Usage examples of "fairgoer".
I was up to where the beam joined with the underpart of the platform and the windows were right above me and the guard, some college-kid fairgoer bracing him from behind, was reaching out a hand down to me and I took it, hanging over the fair for one long moment before he pulled me up and in.
It was no less dusty, what grass there had been had long since been trampled into powder by all the feet of the fairgoers, but at least a traveler was able to move along without risk of acquiring hoofprints on his anatomy.
Here she was distinctly out of place, and besides, there were fewer fairgoers, and less of a chance for an audience.
She kept a tight grip on her pouch and instruments, tried to ignore the crush, and let the flow of fairgoers carry her along.
It was Fair time, and there were no Munstermen in the throng, or Connachtish or Meathish fairgoers yet either, no Ulstermen or Leinsterish travelers to Tara this day.
All about them clustered the fairgoers, held back from the area of combat only by many broad flat-topped stakes driven into the ground, and braided cord stretching from one to the next and the next, all around.
As if unable to help themselves--drawn by the mystery or the misery--the fairgoers drew closer, slowly at first, and then in droves, until there were fifty of them, a hundred, two hundred, gathered around the Jansai caravan and wondering aloud what was afoot.
Now the fairgoers were tripping over each other in their haste to put room between themselves and the Jansai truck.
Various gullible fairgoers whose coin jingled in my purse would doubtless be eager enough to give him a description.
Passing fairgoers too slow to keep boots or skirts clear exclaimed in annoyance.
The boss sent Jeirran on his way with a shove past fairgoers exclaiming at the unexpected diversion.
It was no less dusty, what grass there had been had long since been trampled into powder by all the feet of the pilgrims and fairgoers, but at least a traveler was able to move along without risk of acquiring hoofprints on his anatomy.
Val Con frowned, counting the steps bearing down upon them, then spun and dodged away, putting a group of six fairgoers between them.
Now, as an inducement to Fairgoers to buy the more expensive front-row box seats to watch the forthcoming cremation, the Committee bought several hundred Anti-Murphy pills and encapsulated a pill with each front-row ticket.
He pressed his way through the fairgoers with dignified distaste, and emerged from the vaulting five-story Ptolan Exhibit Hall.