Travelling vendor of goods.
Sinônimos
Examples for "solicitor"
Examples for "solicitor"
1CoreLogic hired Innisfree as its solicitor, the company said earlier this week.
2The other one is in the hands of my solicitor in London.
3A solicitor would continue to deal with matters related to the inspectorate.
4I just cannot believe that behaviour, said Lynne Brooke, a Hampshire-based solicitor.
5The solicitor remained absorbed in the interesting view of the falling rain.
1A peddler aye gives the whole village a fit of the liberalities.
2Accidental message peddler Gracewood says she never expected to be doing this.
3The peddler nodded and continued his pitch in whatever language he spoke.
4Henry reluctantly restrained his impatience, and followed the direction of the peddler.
5It was the peddler, with ashen face and eyes rolling with fear.
1He is in a little book that I bought of the pedlar.
2The pedlar was moving quickly away with his hands in his pockets.
3He then turned a pedlar, in which situation the Revolution found him.
4These Hainaulters could see no difference between us and the average pedlar.
5Thine eyes and half thy tongue are in the pedlar's pack, Magot.
1I have the ear of every society power monger in the country.
2Heretofore, her song had disdained the ordinary topics of the youthful ballad-monger.
3And he tried to use you, no less than that old death-monger.
4He was not a fame-monger, but merely one of God's mad lovers.
5To be overwise is to ossify; and the scruple-monger ends by standing stockstill.
1This violent preliminary takes him aback; his little huckster brain fails him.
2And Thomas Burdett has no powers but ill-will and a huckster's promise.
3So why is our inbox still peppered with messages from huckster automatons?
4As he walked, he called aloud to every side, like a huckster.
5Dost thou not see that the huckster's son knows his own father?
1In short, the canvasser must not feed the voter in any way.
2I needn't have taken the job of canvasser in the first place.
3I never saw a canvasser, and there were only a few posters.
4See here: there's a whole chapter here on elevators, persisted the canvasser.
5A good many men were not canvassed, or at least misunderstood the canvasser.
1The colporteur replied by explaining that prayer must be from the heart.
2The colporteur explained and preached the gospel to the best of his ability.
3His brother had been a tailor and had after that also become a colporteur.
4Among the colporteur's arguments, however, was one that overcame him.
5He gave up shopkeeping in 1795, and became a pedestrian bookseller or colporteur of pamphlets.
1Yet honestly, half my fellows might easily serve as models to any literary cheapjack of the moment.
2It must be cheapjack construction, the worst crap, if one chopper could set up such reverberations in its walls.
3Good letters raise the tone of a business house, poor letters give the idea that it is a cheapjack concern.
4She resembles some old-fashioned, quiet merchant, too dignified to compete with Frankish cheapjacks.
1The organisation was distributing free 'Do Not Knock' stickers to ward off door-to-door sellers.
2Photo: 123RF Chief executive Sue Chetwin said Consumer New Zealand was launching the campaign because of serious complaints about door-to-door sellers.
1In the meantime the travelling salesman taking advantage of his silence, continued:
2It would be about a travelling salesman who dies at the end.
3Imagine a travelling salesman working out the shortest route around town.
4My dad was a travelling salesman and told a good joke.
5His father was a travelling salesman who was fascinated by Indians.