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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Risker

Risker \Risk"er\, n. One who risks or hazards.
--Hudibras.

Wiktionary
risker

n. One who risks or hazards something.

Usage examples of "risker".

And no middle risker was going to stay longer than necessary in that over-crowded warren of disease.

Catriona Davidson Whithorn, lawyer and privileged low risker, would have looked away, avoiding any unnecessary complications.

A low risker himself, he had a rare and endearing knack of treating everyone, low and middle risk, with the same degree of courtesy and friendliness.

However, the courteous policeman insisted no low risker had been brought in last night, either under arrest or as a witness, and when she insisted he look it up anyway, he showed her the computer screen for the entire city, covering everyone who had passed the portals of a police station or even a police car in the last twenty-four hours.

Since her ID was in the bag, as well as her protective mask, and she had a vague idea how such people would regard the straying of a privileged low risker into their territory, she instinctively grasped the bag closer and tried to run.

Ken, a far more sexually restrained individual than she instinctively knew the high risker to be.

The high risker had a taste for low risk women, no doubt for low risk life.

Collum Dyer, veteran of many campaigns, dealer and risker of death, was as frightened as a child.

So low riskers like you never come in contact with the high riskers trapped inside the Old Town.

The heavy, hardworking respectability of her mother had inevitably driven her to opposite extremes until she had begun this strange love affair with the weird and wonderful high riskers of the Old Town.

The north side was lined by big shops heavily frequented by middle riskers, a few of whom occasionally braved it into the Gardens on the other side of the road.

To Catriona it looked like a wasteland under the looming castle, with barbed wire and lookout posts at the far side to keep the high riskers in their own zone.

High riskers were not allowed on public transport, and in any case, they never left the Old Town.

Catriona had thought they must be the few middle risk health professionals or food administrators who worked here, but according to Dot, most of them were high riskers too, just ones with different tastes and standards, people who felt uncomfortable in the glaring, swaggering streets in which they were forced to live.

They were middle riskers, yet after checking their ID, he never questioned their authority.