¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Theatergoing
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Theatergoing
Literary usage of Theatergoing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Play Production in America by Arthur Edwin Krows (1916)
"The answer to this question must be made emphatically in the negative. Any movement
that tends to drive the theatergoing public into special cliques and ..."
2. Play Production in America by Arthur Edwin Krows (1916)
"Any movement that tends to drive the theatergoing public into special cliques
and clienteles, is disruptive of that democracy of the drama in which the ..."
3. The Play of Today: Studies in Play-structure for the Student and the Theatre by Elizabeth Roxana Hunt (1913)
"The receptivity and appreciation of the theatergoing public is a matter of ...
The theatergoing public crowds the background of his consciousness while he ..."
4. Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature by H.W. Wilson Company (1908)
"44: 602- Startling prediction from London. Cosmopol. 4. Ap. '08. 45:674-6. N.
'08. Summer show. Cosmopol. 45: 274-6. Ag. '08. theatergoing in Holland. ..."
5. The Diplomatic Relations of England with the Quadruple Alliance, 1815-1830 by Louis Calvert, Myrna M. Boyce, Paul Padgette (1918)
"The author of the present treatise has been prominent before the eyes of the
theatergoing public of America since 1909, when he was invited overseas to ..."
6. American Jewish Year Book by American Jewish Committee, Jewish Publication Society of America (1909)
"theatergoing in Holland. Ibid., S., 08.—Dramatic Censors and Some New Plays.
Ibid., Je., 09.—The Great Wet Way. New York: Dodd, Mead & Co., 09. ..."
7. The Century (1902)
"... to the Glasgow theatergoing public, not only were the houses packed, but Dunlop
street was thronged with people anxious to witness her performance, ..."
8. Music: A Monthly Magazine, Devoted to the Art, Science, Technic and (1896)
"A long and unpopular run of " Captain Paul " had created an unfavorable impression
among the theatergoing people; added to which, the theater is in a ..."