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Pathfinder   /pˈæθfˌaɪndər/   Listen
Pathfinder

noun
1.
Someone who can find paths through unexplored territory.  Synonyms: guide, scout.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Pathfinder" Quotes from Famous Books



... Leather-Stocking dinner, at which should be served as many of the viands mentioned in the Tales as possible. We stayed two days and it was one long feast. We had venison served in half a dozen different ways. We had antelope; we had porcupine, or hedgehog, as Pathfinder called it; and also we had beaver-tail, which he found toothsome, but which I did not. We had grouse and sage hen. They broke the ice and snared a lot of trout. In their cellar they had a barrel of ...
— Letters of a Woman Homesteader • Elinore Pruitt Stewart

... now won the name of "Pathfinder," was sent out a third time, and crossing what are now Nebraska and Utah, reached the vicinity of Monterey in California. The Mexican authorities ordered him out of the country. But he spent the winter in the mountains, and in the spring was on his ...
— A School History of the United States • John Bach McMaster

... of rapid transit between New York and San Francisco, of luxurious travel across desert and mountain, the story of John Charles Fremont, the Pathfinder of the great West, is of peculiar interest, a striking illustration that the history of the world is in the biography of its leaders, in the ...
— Great Men and Famous Women. Vol. 6 of 8 • Various

... territory may be instanced in the Northland. From its rise at Lake Linderman the Yukon runs twenty-five hundred miles to Bering Sea, traversing an almost unknown region, the remote recesses of which had never felt the moccasined foot of the pathfinder. At occasional intervals men wallowed into its dismal fastnesses, or emerged gaunt and famine-worn. But in the fall of 1896 a great gold strike was made—greater than any since the days of California and Australia; yet, so rude were the means of communication, nearly a year elapsed ...
— Revolution and Other Essays • Jack London

... that Elmer was to act as pathfinder and tracker. He would in turn leave a plain trail that a child ...
— Pathfinder - or, The Missing Tenderfoot • Alan Douglas


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