passenger

[pas-uh n-jer] /ˈpæs ən dʒər/
noun
1.
a person who is traveling in an automobile, bus, train, airplane, or other conveyance, especially one who is not the driver, pilot, or the like.
2.
a wayfarer; traveler.
Origin
1300-50; Middle English passager < Middle French, noun use of passag(i)er (adj.) passing, temporary; see passage, -ier2; for -n- cf. messenger, harbinger, scavenger, popinjay
Related forms
nonpassenger, noun
British Dictionary definitions for passenger

passenger

/ˈpæsɪndʒə/
noun
1.
  1. a person travelling in a car, train, boat, etc, not driven by him
  2. (as modifier): a passenger seat
2.
(mainly Brit) a member of a group or team who is a burden on the others through not participating fully in the work
Word Origin
C14: from Old French passager passing, from passage1
Word Origin and History for passenger
n.

early 14c., passager "passer-by," from Old French passagier "traveler, passer-by" (Modern French passager), noun use of passagier (adj.) "passing, fleeting, traveling," from passage (see passage).

And in this I resemble the Lappwing, who fearing hir young ones to be destroyed by passengers, flyeth with a false cry farre from their nestes, making those that looke for them seeke where they are not .... [John Lyly, "Euphues and His England," 1580]
The -n- was added early 15c. (cf. messenger, harbinger, scavenger, porringer). Meaning "one traveling in a vehicle or vessel" first attested 1510s. Passenger-pigeon of North America so called from 1802; extinct since 1914.