Citations:Pacific Northwesterner

Noun: "a resident of the Pacific Northwest region of North America"

 * 1991 — Mary Daheim, Legs Benedict, Avon Books (1999), ISBN 9780380800780, page 47:
 * Maybe it was the weather: As a native Pacific Northwesterner, rain during the fall, winter, and early spring didn't bother her.
 * 1995 — Jack Ohman, Fishing Bass-Ackwards: Coming Down the Pike With Off-The-Walleye Humor, Willow Creek Press (1995), ISBN 9781572230309, page 118:
 * So when a Pacific Northwesterner tells me about his fantastic steelhead fishing, I nod graciously and at all the appropriate moments, but secretly know ing [sic] that the guy is snowing me.
 * 1996 — Carlos Arnaldo Schwantes, The Pacific Northwest: An Interpretive History (Revised and Enlarged Edition), University of Nebraska Press (1996), ISBN 9780803242258, page 6:
 * Fundamental to a Pacific Northwesterner's sense of place is the awareness that much of the region remains uninhabited or only lightly populated.
 * 2001 — Patricia K. Lichen, Passionate Slugs and Hollywood Frogs: An Uncommon Field Guide to Northwest Backyards, Sasquatch Books (2001), ISBN 9781570612220, page 121:
 * Shaken and upset, Esther did what any Pacific Northwesterner would: she drove directly to a coffee shop and ordered a latte.
 * 2003 — Les Parrott & Neil Clark Warren, Love the Life You Live: 3 Secrets to Feeling Good — Deep Down in Your Soul, Tyndale House Publishers (2003), ISBN 9780842383608, page xi:
 * On a sunny day in Seattle, one of those pristine days when every Pacific Northwesterner forgives the rain for falling so much,
 * 2005 — Merle Barbara Metcalfe, Freeloaders, AuthorHouse (2005), ISBN 1420825151, page 15:
 * Karen and Lucy drank in the Art Museum exhibit, a flamboyant show of colorful blown glass in monumental arrangements by Dale Chihuly, another Pacific Northwesterner.
 * 2006 — Eric Peterson, Ramble: A Field Guide to the U.S.A., speck press (2006), ISBN 1933108088, page 28:
 * Pacific Northwesterners, sometimes called Cascadians, are so laid back that it's hard to tell if anyone actually works up here.
 * 2007 — J.B. MacKinnon & Alisa Smith, Plenty: One Man, One Woman, and a Raucous Year of Eating Locally, Harmony Books (2007), ISBN 9780307347329, unnumbered page:
 * The environmental historian Joseph E. Taylor III once wrote that Pacific Northwesterners have been predicting the imminent demise of their salmon runs for 125 years.