A hawker is a type of street vendor; "a person who travels from place-to-place selling goods." Synonyms include huckster, peddler, chapman or in Britain, costermonger.
You can use hawker to refer to a person who tries to sell things by calling at people's homes or standing in the street, especially when you do not approve of this activity. [disapproval] Synonyms: pedlar, tout, vendor, travelling salesman More Synonyms of hawker.
What is the difference between a hawker and a seller?
Answer: Hawker is a person who offers goods for sale in the market, e.g., newspaper hawker. Vendor is a person who sells things that are often prepared at home by their families, who purchase, clean, sort and make them ready to sell, e.g., those who sell food or snacks on the street, prepare most of them at home.
On this page you'll find 14 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to hawker, such as: costermonger, huckster, salesperson, seller, colporteur, and pitchperson.
Historically, ancestors with itinerant occupations may be recorded as hawkers or pedlars but not all were Gypsies. The same applies to the many agricultural labourers living in tents listed in the Surrey census returns.
Although the words costermonger, hawker and pedlar were used interchangeably, the costermonger or hawker was, technically speaking, someone who sold his wares by crying them out in the street. The pedlar travelled the countryside with his wares, visiting houses along the way to sell them.
HAWKERS and Pedlars, the designation of itinerant dealers who convey their goods from place to place to -sell. The word "hawker" seems to have come into English from the Ger. Hiiker or Dutch heuker in the early 16th century.
Children hawking in the street is a common practice in Nigeria especially in urban areas. The children are made to sell, carrying heavy loads on their heads for several hours during or after school.
Hint:A hawker provides door to door service. He sells his goods by calling out the names of his product. He generally owns a tie which we may call a movable shop and keeps in its different products of our everyday use. He sells his goods at a minimum profit.
Hawker food is called hawker food because they're sold by hawkers that are in hawkers centres. Each hawker stall in these centres usually carry their own cuisine, whether Indian, Malaysian, Chinese, and so on.
/ˈhɔːkər/ a person who makes money by selling goods, going from place to place and asking people to buy them. He worked as a street hawker, selling cheap lighters at two for a pound.
Peddlers: A peddler also moves from house to house and sells articles of daily use. But he carries his wares on his head or on the back of a mule. Therefore the basic difference between the two is that hawker has a cycle or cart to carry his goods while peddlar carries his goods on heads.
The difference between a hawker and a shopkeeper is that a hawker does not have a fixed shop, that is, he sells his products from street to street by roaming around. Whereas a shopkeeper has a fixed shop and people come to shop to purchase things.
A costermonger, coster, or costard is a street seller of fruit and vegetables in British towns. The term is derived from the words costard (a medieval variety of apple) and monger (seller), and later came to be used to describe hawkers in general.
The brown hawker is large common dragonfly found in Ireland, it is distinctive because of its chocolate brown colouring. They grow to 7.3cm long and have a wingspan of 10.2cm.
The Romani, also spelled Romany or Rromani (/ˈroʊməni/ ROH-mə-nee or /ˈrɒməni/ ROM-ə-nee), colloquially known as the Roma ( SG : Rom), are an Indo-Aryan ethnic group who traditionally lived a nomadic, itinerant lifestyle.
Hawker was proclaimed on 1 July 1880 and named after the Honourable George Charles Hawker, who was born in London in 1819. George Charles Hawker was a grazier and entered South Australian parliament in 1858.