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The Collaborative International Dictionary
fairgrounds

fairgrounds \fairgrounds\, n. pl. same as fairground.

Wiktionary
fairgrounds

n. 1 (alternative spelling of fairground English); the grounds where a fair is held. 2 (plural of fairground English)Category:English plurals

Usage examples of "fairgrounds".

Suppose they were battling for their lives inside the fairgrounds, with no way to reach him?

They also allowed Botha, through the sophisticated instrumentation woven into his attire, to coordinate the actual final layout of the fairgrounds with the multiple schematics he had spent nearly a year preparing.

This bulky apparatus was to be expected, since the building's task was to integrate communications within the fairgrounds, both private and public.

If you're interested in learning more, or asking additional questions, you can find it on your fairgrounds readout.

Twikanrozex tracked the human's progress across the strip of fairgrounds pavement, which looked and felt exactly like grass except that it was impervious to both footwear and the elements and needed neither light nor water to maintain its springiness and color.

Outside the fairgrounds, their pairing would have made them conspicuous.

Across the great lake, shimmering like a sheet of blue metal in the pellucid morning sunshine, the swooping, soaring structure of the fairgrounds could just be seen in the distance.

Having heavily infiltrated the fairgrounds in response to the padres' advance warning, well-prepared local police equipped with sensitive weapons sensors were able to pounce on the perpetrators even before they could reveal themselves.

A few small fires were burning around the fairgrounds, but nothing, he had been assured by the relevant authorities, that the on-grounds facilities could not handle.

He did not need to check his communicator for the location of the communications center, having memorized the entire layout of the fairgrounds several months earlier.

That was hardly surprising, given the volume of communications that were doubtless flying not only at the fair but between the fairgrounds and the city.

After some days of sport and recreation at the fair, we may then, if we wish, from the fairgrounds themselves, take tarns to Port Kar, an expensive proposition to be sure, but one which your resources will doubtless prove sufficient to fund.

We were some two hundred pasangs west of the fairgrounds, at the edge of the woods of Clearchus, just off the road of Clearchus.