roomer

Etymology

room + -er

noun

  1. A person who rents a room.
  2. (in combination) A residence having the specified number of rooms.
    Rents were to be $60 a month for a two-room flat, $90 for a three-roomer and $120 for a four-roomer. 2009, Peter H. L. Lim, Chronicle of Singapore, 1959-2009: Fifty Years of Headline News, page 59

adv

  1. (obsolete) At a greater distance; farther off.
    The Captaine in a Shippe of warre, is a iollie fellowe, and thinketh himselfe a lyttle God, because hee speaketh prowdlie to the Souldiors, and maketh them quayle at the shaking of his lockes: […] If any be vnrulie, hee casteth him ouerboorde, or if any be fearefull, hee bindes him to the Maste: if hée crie aloofe, the Helmes man dares not goe roomer: and if hée bidde shoote, the gunner dares not but giue fyre. 1581, Richard Madox, A Learned and a Godly Sermon, to be read of all men, but especially for all marryners, captaynes and passengers, which trauell the seas, London
    1607, John Harington (translator), Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto, London: John Norton and Simon Waterson, Book 41, stanza 17, p. 343, Yet did the master by all meanes assay, To steare out roomer, or to keepe aloofe, Or at the least to strike sailes if they may, As in such danger was for their behoofe.

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