the persons or number of persons present: an attendance of more than 300 veterans.
Idioms for attendance
dance attendance, to be obsequious in one's attentions or service; attend constantly: He was given a larger office and several assistants to dance attendance on him.
Origin of attendance
1325–75; Middle English <Anglo-French, Middle French. See attend, -ance
In-person attendance was optional, but those who opted out had to still attend on Zoom and report absences to the coach.
School Sports Became ‘Clubs’ Amid the Pandemic – Now Two Coaches Are Out|Ashly McGlone|September 17, 2020|Voice of San Diego
Since stepping back from CEO duties, his public persona has been shaped by his book, celebrity friends including Sean Combs and even attendance at last year’s Burning Man festival.
The losses continue to pile up for hedge fund king Ray Dalio|Bernhard Warner|September 15, 2020|Fortune
Consequences of the pandemic on these industries could range from lowered attendance at film festivals and disruptions in film distribution to delayed or canceled movie releases and concert dates to curtailed on-location film shoots.
How the coronavirus outbreak is roiling the film and entertainment industries|Alissa Wilkinson|September 11, 2020|Vox
Exactly how schools should take attendance for online learning has been a fraught question.
The Learning Curve: San Diego Unified Is Terrified of Kids Opting Out|Will Huntsberry|September 10, 2020|Voice of San Diego
Guilford and Miami-Dade reported that in some weeks, over 90 percent of students logged on to classes, though average attendance trended lower.
Creative school plans could counter inequities exposed by COVID-19|Sujata Gupta|September 8, 2020|Science News
Mallory, Skolnik, and Simmons were all in attendance Wednesday for the City Hall press conference.
Eric Garner Protesters Have a Direct Line to City Hall|Jacob Siegel|December 11, 2014|DAILY BEAST
In attendance was supermodel Elle Macpherson and king of pop Michael Jackson, who also performed.
I Watched a Casino Kill Itself: The Awful Last Nights of Atlantic City’s Taj Mahal|Olivia Nuzzi|December 8, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Her attendance will bring in more parishioners and thus more money to fund church programs.
The Good Wife’s Religion Politics: Voters Have No Faith in Alicia's Atheism|Regina Lizik|November 24, 2014|DAILY BEAST
“You have a drink with Mitch McConnell,” he pleaded with all two thousand-plus in attendance.
The Booze That Saved America|Kevin Bleyer|November 8, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Affordability (20%): Net price of attendance after deducting grants and scholarship aid (NCES).
The Daily Beast College Rankings Methodology|Brandy Zadrozny|November 5, 2014|DAILY BEAST
When old Katasha exerted herself it behooved all the daughters of her tribe to be in attendance.
The Sun Maid|Evelyn Raymond
First, that attendance was not compulsory; and next, that it was too advanced for the state of society in the island.
At Last|Charles Kingsley
I am informed that the delegates are in attendance upon the committee.
History of Woman Suffrage, Volume III (of III)|Various
At first, meetings were held three nights in the week, and the attendance was large.
Steve P. Holcombe, the Converted Gambler|Rev. Gross Alexander
I saw Eustace alone in the next room while the doctor was in attendance on you.
The Law and the Lady|Wilkie Collins
British Dictionary definitions for attendance
attendance
/ (əˈtɛndəns) /
noun
the act or state of attending
the number of persons presentan attendance of 5000 at the festival