Noun
a native or resident of New York (especially of New York City)
Source: WordNetYou don't have to be born in New York City to be a New Yorker. You have to live here for six months. And if at the end of the six months you walk faster, you talk faster, you think faster, you're a New Yorker. Ed Koch
The true New Yorker secretly believes that people living anywhere else have to be, in some sense, kidding. John Updike
Life is a campus: in a Greenwich Village bookstore, looking for a New Yorker collection, I asked of an earnest-looking assistant where I might find the humour section. Peering over her granny glasses, she enquired, "Humour studies would that be, sir?" Keith Waterhouse
New York lost a classic. Carmine was an old school New Yorker. Anthony Weiner
Commas in The New Yorker fall with the precision of knives in a circus act, outlining the victim. E. B. White
At first, writing for The New Yorker was very scary to me. I couldn't imagine anything that I would write in that typeface. David Sedaris