Holidaymaker in a sentence as a noun

Leslie: Who was it, who was it, who said "He is a tourist, you are a holidaymaker, but I am a traveller?" Hugh: Oh, was it Humbert Wolfe?

Are you sre you didn't just make the mistake a lot of holidaymakers do? That is, viewing your vacation destination through rose coloured glasses?

> But soon, holidaymakers will be able to book their entire trips without leaving the TripAdvisor app. Rivals beware.

I was not familiar with the term holidaymaker, and thought it was corporate speak for a Thomas Cook employee. Very confused until halfway through the article.

One interesting part of the news coverage is that there are 600k customers involved, and only 150k of them are UK holidaymakers. Notice the lack of coverage of the other 450k?

Perhaps in the way a holidaymaker considers themselves aware of other cultures! For real exploration we have to be living there.

His airline began when he got stuck in the Caribbean, chartered a plane to get him out of there, and he decided to sell tickets to the other stranded holidaymakers to cover his costs. You're not seeing anything like that in this campaign.

Maybe it wasn't so smart to have that period between lockdown 1 and lockdown 2, when people were allowed to go on holiday to france and spain - then the government would announce a rules change with 24 hours notice, forcing holidaymakers to race back to the UK? That was some truly weird public policy.

Guess it depends on whether the community is worth paying the sort of premium the average middle class Australian holidaymaker won't.

Naturally, it would include US citizens and permanent residents, and not holidaymakers. They already need travel insurance.

The most disturbing thing I've seen in the reporting this week was that the local police were called at one point, but they sided with the hotel and told the holidaymakers to go back inside! I find it remarkable that, at least in the group who were being interviewed on TV yesterday after they made it home, the disagreements did not become physical.

Indeed, this quote scared me: > Abta, which represents travel companies in the UK, said holidaymakers need to learn to be ultra-cautious when it comes to talking about forthcoming trips no, we shouldn't 'need to learn to be ultra-cautious', we should be able to say whatever we want without living in fear. edit: yes, whatever we want.

It's also the isolation from regular life, the particular atmosphere of only being around other holidaymakers, stopping at various islands along the way for day trips. Not my idea of an ideal holiday, and the workers' rights + environmental situation is absolutely appalling, but I do have fond memories of the one time I went on a cruise when I was a child.

Holidaymaker definitions

noun

someone who travels for pleasure

See also: tourist tourer