Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
In days gone by every country person had a city relative.
I'm a country person, so naturally I wanted to go back.
He was dressed like a simple country person and could hardly talk.
He rather thought of Kate as a country person.
Chuck will come across as this relaxed, country person.
In so far as it would bring to the country persons really able to contribute to rural life, this movement is a desirable one.
To me, a country person, it's like being abroad.
He is a city person and she is a country person, friends say.
We want to trust that the international community will continue to give competent African and developing country persons the opportunity to prove themselves.
"So a caipirinha is something only a rough country person would drink.
Not being a born and bred country person, this was a new concept and learning experience for me.
If you feel homesick, there is probably a fellow country person you can talk to.
He made it seem so romantic: ah, the poor people doing their cabbages, how lovely being a country person.
You must remember, Uncle, that Remrut is a country person.
This has been attributed to the fact the common Irish country person could not identify with much of the technology of the time.
She was quintessentially English and a country person who lived what people now might see as a romantic idea of country life.
If I were a country Person, I'd be dead of starvation by now.
You know I'm not a country person.
Rube: A country person, unsophisticated in the ways of rubrication.
The word campesino in Spanish translates to "peasant" or "country person."
The poet is a country person spending Christmas in an alien suburb, because someone is sick.
"Ugalane" has also been used as a disparaging word for an unsophisticated country person.
An elderly white woman, a country person, Charlie guesses, sits with two sullen girls of about ten and twelve.
I'm more of a country person.
There alighted two women, one the driver, an ordinary country person, the other a finely built figure in the deep mourning of a widow.