partygoer

See also: party-goer

English

Etymology

From party +‎ goer.

Noun

partygoer (plural partygoers)

  1. Someone who attends a party or parties.
    • 2007 July 15, Emily Brady, “Bedlam Comes to Visit a Drowsy Neighborhood”, in The New York Times[1]:
      The partygoers, in turn, blamed the police for overaggressiveness.
    • 2014, Tamar Aylat-Yaguri, Jon Stewart, The Authenticity of Faith in Kierkegaard's Philosophy, →ISBN, page vii:
      Faith should be a matter of arduous struggle and self-doubt, but the partygoer wants the experience to be easy, immediate and elevating.
    • 2015, Penny Reid, Elements of Chemistry:
      My eyes flickered to the door behind him as sounds of partygoers being loud and ruckusy ebbed and flowed, cutting through this little world we'd created in the laundry room.

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