English edit

Etymology edit

reboard +‎ -er

Noun edit

reboarder (plural reboarders)

  1. (rare) One who boards a vehicle again.
    • 1983, W. Boyd Littrell, Gideon Sjoberg, Louis A. Zurcher, Bureaucracy as a social problem, page 209:
      Unless the delay before take-off is unduly long, or some exigency exists, experienced passengers who are continuing on the flight do not leave the plane. They know that the reboarding process will cast them in with the crowd of new passengers, since all must board together — reboarders receive no precedence.
    • 1993, Irma Kurtz, The Great American Bus Ride: An Intrepid Woman's Cross-country Adventure:
      There were an awful lot of reboarders, however, continuing on to New Orleans and beyond. For the first time in days the predominant language was English, and there were as many blacks as whites among the passengers.