Find the word definition

Wiktionary
wagoneers

n. (plural of wagoneer English)

Usage examples of "wagoneers".

Reaching the wagons, Beka looked underneath the nearest and saw unsuspecting wagoneers cooking their evening meal less than twenty feet away.

The Murgos pose as merchants for the same reason that we pose as wagoneers - so that they can move about more or less undetected.

Bahzell supposed they should have been, given the pithy comments Kilthandahknarthas' wagoneers had made about the highways beyond the East Wall Mountains.

Some of those roads had seemed like marvels of engineering to him and Brandark, but now he knew why the wagoneers had been so critical, and even with the reality underfoot, he found it hard to believe in.

One of Kilthan's wagoneers had told Bahzell the material came from the distant jungles of southeastern Norfressa, although he'd been a bit vague about just whom the dwarves dealt with to obtain it.

The reindeer seemed unperturbed, but the wagoneers looked a little anxious, and the mounted men had moved their horses onto the better footing offered by the turf beside the road proper.

The wagoneers had stopped two days out from Lordenfel to replace their wagons' wheels with the sled runners.

Thence the Lordsmen guards and kinless wagoneers brought baskets of grain and jars of oil.

There were tents and wagons with platforms, and an air of messiness as townsfolk and wagoneers hastened to set up the fairgrounds.

If a town gets mean enough, we get all the wagoneers together and go burn them out.

He was aware of the stares of all the young men, wagoneers as well as townsfolk.

The wagoneers might be telling truth-there were more and richer trains to come if this one came out whole.

Arnulf proved to be no trouble, although he asked a hundred questions as he walked alongside the wagons, driven by two skeptical wagoneers in the service of the king's stewards who had grown so accustomed to the presence of the king on their daily travels that they were amused by the lad's excitement.

On the king's progress Rosvita had grown accustomed to the shouts of the wagoneers, the neighing of horses, the fall of rain, the heedless song of birds, the smell of the stable, and the laughter of wind on her face.