¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Operagoers
1. operagoer [n] - See also: operagoer
Lexicographical Neighbors of Operagoers
Literary usage of Operagoers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Mr. Punch's History of Modern England by Charles Larcom Graves (1922)
"inseparably associated in the minds of middle-aged operagoers with Mascagni's
solitary triumph. When we turn from grand to comic opera, the names of Gilbert ..."
2. University Musical Encyclopedia by Louis Charles Elson (1912)
"... to Continental nations, it has been transported with the works in which it
was introduced and has become a familiar feature to operagoers everywhere. ..."
3. The Grand Opera Singers of To-day: An Account of the Leading Operatic Stars by Henry Charles Lahee (1912)
"There was nothing which promised to approximate in importance — that is, for the
average run of operagoers — the pompous launching of the ' Girl of the ..."
4. The Musical World (1868)
"... success of music—Ophelia (Nilsson) perfectly unheard of ovation—never within
remembrance of operagoers the equal—places taken for the ninth performance, ..."
5. The Musical World (1865)
"... able to say nothing ; but the subjoined advertisement, which was circulated
in the theatre on Saturday night, will be read by operagoers with a certain ..."
6. The New Music Review and Church Music Review by American Guild of Organists (1906)
"But as a concert singer she achieved many things that were as indelible prints
on the mind of the hearer. will the operagoers in the thirties of this ..."