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Fare   /fɛr/   Listen
Fare

noun
1.
An agenda of things to do.  Synonym: menu.
2.
The sum charged for riding in a public conveyance.  Synonym: transportation.
3.
A paying (taxi) passenger.
4.
The food and drink that are regularly served or consumed.
verb
(past & past part. fared; pres. part. faring)
1.
Proceed or get along.  Synonyms: come, do, get along, make out.  "How are you making out in graduate school?" , "He's come a long way"
2.
Eat well.



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"Fare" Quotes from Famous Books



... man, Abdu," said one of his companions, sneeringly, "and very brave. Go and cut yonder dog's ropes and see how you will fare! Allah! but he would eat ...
— Under the Rebel's Reign • Charles Neufeld

... one only to find when we had eaten it that we had changed our minds and wanted watermelon, which see-saw opinions we kept up till all the melons were gone. It would be impossible for any one who had not had our canyon fare to appreciate the exhilarating effect of this ...
— A Canyon Voyage • Frederick S. Dellenbaugh

... throughout the year. As soon, therefore, as I was convinced that the adjacent country was safe, I bought it, and settled upon it in good earnest, abandoning the V hut. I did so with some regret, for we had good fare enough in it, and I rather liked it; we had only stones for seats, but we made splendid fires, and got fresh and clean snow-grass to lie on, and dried the floor with wood-ashes. Then we confined the snow-grass within certain limits by means ...
— A First Year in Canterbury Settlement • Samuel Butler

... are grown fat with devouring his father's beeves, fare on which you seem to thrive, le Maure," said the one-eyed, "though you were not wont to like English beef and English discipline better than Gascon wine and Gascon freedom. I begin to think that the cub of the Black Wolf of the Pyrenees ...
— The Lances of Lynwood • Charlotte M. Yonge

... recollections of the river camps of his childhood. There were the same long tables covered with red oilcloth, the same pine benches worn smooth and shiny, the same thick crockery, and the same huge receptacles steaming with hearty—and well-cooked—food. Nowhere does the man who labours with his hands fare better than in the average lumber camp. Forest operations have a largeness in conception and execution that leads away from the habit of the mean, small and foolish economics. At one side, and near the windows, stood a smaller table. The covering of this ...
— The Rules of the Game • Stewart Edward White


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