Passenger



  1. Michael David Rosenberg (born 17 May 1984), better known by his stage name Passenger, is an English singer-songwriter and musician. Previously the main vocalist and songwriter of Passenger, Rosenberg opted to keep the band's name for his solo work after the band dissolved in 2009.
  2. 2: a traveler in a public or private conveyance Examples of passenger in a Sentence There were two passengers in the car in addition to the driver. There's no room for passengers on this project; everybody must do his share of the work.
  1. Silent Passenger Log In
  2. Passenger 57

The new album 'Songs for the Drunk and Broken Hearted' out now - Music and Merchandise - CD, Vinyl, T-shirts, Hoodies, Accessories. Book tickets for Passenger's World Tour - UK, Europe, US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Shotcut download for mac. Food & Wine's Best Coffee in Pennsylvania & a Certified B Corporation - Visit Passenger's fresh roasted specialty coffee & tea showroom in Lancaster, PA. Learn to brew, subscribe to our coffee or tea, and find out more about our retail locations. Find Passenger bio, music, credits, awards, & streaming links on AllMusic - The folk-tinged indie pop project of.

mid-14c., passager 'a passer-by; a traveler,' from Old French passagier, passageor 'traveler, passer-by' (Modern French passager), noun use of passagier (adj.) 'passing, fleeting, traveling,' from passage 'mountain pass, passage' (11c.), from passer 'to go by,' from Vulgar Latin *passare 'to step, walk, pass,' from Latin passus 'step, pace' (from PIE root *pete- 'to spread').

And in this I resemble the Lappwing, who fearing hir young ones to be destroyed by passengers, flyeth with a false cry farre from their nestes, making those that looke for them seeke where they are not .. [John Lyly, 'Euphues and His England,' 1580]

The -n- was added early 15c. (compare messenger, harbinger, scavenger, porringer). The oldest sense now is obsolete; meaning 'one traveling in a public vehicle or vessel,' especially in exchange for a fare, is attested from 1510s; hence, in modern use, 'one riding in a private vehicle driven by another.' The railroad passenger-car is attested from 1832. The North American passenger-pigeon was so called from 1802 for its extensive wanderings in search of food; they have been extinct since 1914.

Entries related to passenger

Others are reading

Passenger

Dictionary entries near passenger

Passamaquoddy

passant

passbook

passe

passel

passenger

Passenger

passe-partout

passer

passer-by

Silent Passenger Log In

passerine

Passenger 57

Ps vita remote play ps4 away from home. passible