Antonyms for passerby
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : pas-er-bahy, -bahy, pah-ser- |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈpæs ərˈbaɪ, -ˌbaɪ, ˈpɑ sər- |
Definition of passerby
- As in pedestrian : noun person traveling on foot
- As in bystander : noun person who watches
- As in eyewitness : noun person who sees an event occur
- She is pleased when a passerby stops to admire, and especially so if it be a young miss.
- Extract from : « Blue Ridge Country » by Jean Thomas
- You stop the first passerby, and you say I want to find such and such a street.
- Extract from : « Natural Wonders » by Edwin Tenney Brewster
- A passerby appears down the path, and she hastily withdraws her hand.
- Extract from : « Kipps » by H. G. Wells
- He was told by a passerby that it was the home of a club waiter.
- Extract from : « The Forged Note » by Oscar Micheaux
- He walked into their shelter until he was out of any passerby's range of vision.
- Extract from : « The Mighty Dead » by William Campbell Gault
- Probably the best we can do is to allow any passerby who is hit and hurt to keep the book.
- Extract from : « Seeing Things at Night » by Heywood Broun
- It is well that you should call to every passerby, "Look here!"
- Extract from : « Bleak House » by Charles Dickens
- All that the first passerby had to do at any hour, was to give it a push.
- Extract from : « Les Misrables » by Victor Hugo
- A passerby noticed the sound and paused to look at the two sharply.
- Extract from : « The Place Beyond the Winds » by Harriet T. Comstock
- There was no garden or inclosure round it, and any passerby would have concluded that it was uninhabited.
- Extract from : « The Lion of Saint Mark » by G. A. Henty
Synonyms for passerby
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019