¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Outgoers
1. outgoer [n] - See also: outgoer
Lexicographical Neighbors of Outgoers
Literary usage of Outgoers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Life Time in South Africa: Being the Recollections of the First Premier of by John Robinson (1900)
"... TIME IN SOUTH AFRICA CHAPTER I THE outgoers SOME twenty-three years ago a
visitor from South Africa called upon an eminent firm of publishers in London ..."
2. Collections of the Maine Historical Society by Maine Historical Society (1906)
"Peoples are taking their place whom we may deem not the equals of the outgoers.
But who shall presume to judge the reasons of God's ways, or to know the ..."
3. Four Years' Residence in the West Indies, During the Years 1826, 7, 8, and 9 by Frederic William Naylor Bayley (1833)
"ADVICE TO outgoers. MOST persons who go to the West Indies are at a loss to ...
On these subjects, to future outgoers, I will give a word or two of advice. ..."
4. Denmark: Its History and Topography, Language, Literature, Fine-arts, Social by Harald Weitemeyer, Herman Heinrich Louis Schwanenflügel, Angul Hammerich, Vilhelm Adolf Secher, Marcus Rubin (1891)
"Then follows a change for some years; but in the last 20—30 years the outgoers
far exceed the incomers. From 1880 to 1889 about 73000 persons emigrated from ..."
5. Environmental Performance Reviews by Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. Committee on Environmental Policy (2001)
"Over two years the total cost of the outgoers scheme has been almost EUR 0.9
billion. However, most agricultural policy support remains associated with ..."
6. Collections of the Maine Historical Society. [1st Ser by Maine Historical Society (1906)
"Peoples are taking their place whom we may deem not the equals of the outgoers.
But who shall presume to judge the reasons of God's ways, or to know the ..."
7. Ben-Hur by Lew Wallace (1881)
"The road was divided into separate ways for footmen, for men on horses, and men
in chariots; and those again into separate ways for outgoers and incomers. ..."