hawkers in English

noun
1
a person who travels around selling goods, typically advertising them by shouting.
Hawkers came to sell their wares in small row boats near the cruise boats.
2
a falconer.

Use "hawkers" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "hawkers" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "hawkers", or refer to the context using the word "hawkers" in the English Dictionary.

1. Some hawkers use portable battery-operated public-address systems.

2. It has been estimated that the city may have over 100,000 hawkers.

3. All manner of hawkers and street sellers were plying their trade.

4. Are they canvassers, solicitors, peddlers, hawkers, itinerant merchants or transient vendors of merchandise or services?

5. Hawkers (peddlers) were often frowned upon by the law, but book peddlers were treated differently.

6. Police officers were taking bribes from hawkers who were hawking on the streets.

7. The atmosphere is usually crowded and noisy with hawkers shouting and fast-paced music playing over loudspeakers.

8. The fish hawkers on the beach stalls opposite sell plaice still flapping, straight out of the sea.

9. The area was dedicated to hawkers before the Second World War, but underwent a renaissance in the mid-1980s.

10. Source say County Askaris, especially from other Counties like Nairobi, are fond of harassing hawkers and traders.

11. It doesn't help that today is a Sunday, so the usual bustle of hawkers, pedestrians and cars that enliven the empty drabness are missing.

12. Both men wore garlands of wild jasmine, sold to them by child hawkers who worked the front of the Continental.

13. For example, in laws of Massachusetts and Missouri that imposed penalties for hawkers operating without license, the book peddlers were excluded.

14. The report found that "purist" booksellers resented the souvenir hawkers for putting off their Parisian clientele and 50% of those interviewed said trade was bad.

15. The absence of cars and hawkers, little tackiness and an incredibly relaxed atmosphere (at least for Chinese standards) means Pingyao hasn't turned into a tourist circus -- yet.