1851, Mrs. Oliphant (Margaret), Passages in the life of Mrs. Margaret Maitland of Sunnyside:
[...] seeing that they were fremd in heart, if they were kin in blood.
1868, Legh Knight, Tonic Bitters: A Novel, page 181:
The doctor went up to the bed, and said, firmly, " Miss Garnock, you must not keep Mr. Yonge any longer." "Who'll he be that comes meddling between me and my Tar?" shrieked the patient. "Mither, bid yon fremd body gang his ways. I'll no be fashed wi' him the day."
1873, Blackwood's Edinburgh magazine:
[...] and if I'm to be no more hereafter to them that belong to me, than to legions of strange angels, or a whole nation of fremd folk!
1873, Heathergate, Heathergate, page 66:
There's room for everybody in the world, I suppose, and something for everybody to do, and it behoves them that have few kin to make the more friends of fremd folk.
1875, John Howard Nodal, George Milner, A glossary of the Lancashire dialect:
Thus, a person living with a family to whom he is not related is termed "a fremd body." If it were asked, "Is he akin to you?" the answer would be, "Nawe, he's fremd," i.e. "he's one of us, but not a relation."
Fast alle Amerikaner können ihre Wurzeln in fremde Länder zurückverfolgen, und deshalb ist Einwanderung ein Thema, das die Identität der USA auf besondere Weise berührt.
Nearly all Americans can trace back their roots into foreign countries, and therefore immigration is an issue that touches the identity of the US in a special way.
[masculine]noun/ˈfrɛmdənfyːrɐ/(Fremdenführers or Fremdenführer)(alsoFremdenführerin/ˈfrɛmdənfyːrərɪn/[feminine](Fremdenführerin or Fremdenführerinnen))
●jd, der beruflich Touristen Sehenswürdigkeiten zeigt
tour guide
die Stadt mit einem Fremdenführer besichtigen to visit the sights of a city with a tour guide
jemand, der mit entsprechender Qualifikation gegen Bezahlung fremden Besuchern die Sehenswürdigkeiten eines Ortes, Gebäudes o. Ä. zeigt und erläutert (Berufsbezeichnung)