A resident of a town or city.
1It was worth being a small-towner to have a brother so splendid.
2Most he could ever hope after that was to be a small-towner.
3All that Whipple money, and she has to be just a small-towner!
4She gave me a look that made me feel very much an out-of-towner.
5They think that I am an out-of-towner, not one of them.
6They can tell a New Yorker from an out-of-towner every time.
7Describes how he is handicapped as an out-of-towner with no black market contacts.
8The New York Hotel Association, on the other hand, speaks darkly to the out-of-towner.
9So my accuser could be a commuter, an out-of-towner, or a local desiring anonymity.
10Edward is just an out-of-towner looking for directions, so his intentions are pure, too.
11By it, he saw the body of the out-of-towner, lying sprawled on the ground.
12She's an out-of-towner and a close friend of you-know-who's.
13In attendance were Nitti, Ricca, Charlie Fischetti, and an out-of-towner, Louis "Lepke" Buchalter.
14An out-of-towner-youcould tell because he wore lead-linedunderwear here in Sandego-haggledover a bulk order.
15Decline and an out-of-towner's free time meet at Stringfellows, a topless bar infested with political types that evening.
16Thinks it's because she's an out-of-towner.