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Definition of Cyclist
1. Noun. A person who rides a bicycle.
Generic synonyms: Pedaler, Pedaller
Specialized synonyms: Bernard Hinault, Hinault, Eddy Merckx, Merckx
Derivative terms: Bicycle, Bicycle, Bicycle, Cycle, Cycle, Wheel
Definition of Cyclist
1. n. A cycler.
Definition of Cyclist
1. Noun. A person who rides a cycle, especially a bicycle, or who habitually engages in cycling. ¹
2. Noun. (context: punningly) A user of the software language CycL. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Cyclist
1. one who rides a bicycle [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cyclist
Literary usage of Cyclist
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Great Britain: England, Wales, and Scotland as Far as Loch Maree and the by Karl Baedeker (Firm), Karl Baedeker, Karl Baedeker (Firm (1887)
"It has a resident Chief Consul in the United States *(Mr. FW Weston, Savin Hill,
The cyclist who contemplates even the shortest tour in Great Britain ly ..."
2. Battling for Gold, Or, Stirring Incidents of Goldfields Life in West Australia by John Marshall (1903)
"A SPECIAL cyclist CHASED BY DINGOES. There is probably no country in the ...
The only recorded instance in which a cyclist was attacked by animals took ..."
3. Lawyers' Reports Annotated by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1905)
"To cases In which the accident in suit would probably not have happened If the
cyclist had not been traveling when the light was dim, the test of liability ..."
4. The Tactics of Home Defense by Charles Edward Callwell (1908)
"THB R$LE OF THE cyclist. IN spite of his rare qualifications for operating in
Thene- enclosed country, the cyclist is still something of under a Cinderella ..."
5. Africa from South to North Through Marotseland by Alfred St. Hill Gibbons (1904)
"... capricious treatment of her people — The "royal" cyclist and his suite—Mr.
... cyclist ..."
6. A Critical Study of German Tactics and of the New German Regulations by Marie Félix de Pardieu (1912)
"THE CAVALRY AND THE cyclist CORPS. In any case in France, though we have a
notorious inferiority in cavalry, we must remember that in this arm especially ..."
7. Over Fen and Wold by James John Hissey (1898)
"The cost of obliging a stranger—Branston—A lost cyclist—In search of a
husband !—Dunston Pillar—An architectural puzzle-—A Lincolnshire spa—Exploring—An ..."