peddle in English

verb
1
try to sell (something, especially small goods) by going from house to house or place to place.
he peddled art and printing materials around the country
synonyms:sellsell from door to doorhawktoutvendtrade (in)deal intraffic in

Use "peddle" in a sentence

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

1. She loves to peddle gossip.

2. He can not peddle a book deal.

3. Compare sell, vend, peddle , push and flog.

4. She loves to peddle gossip round the village.

5. Imagine darling Hugh forced to peddle wood!

6. To peddle ( goods ) aggressively , especially by calling out.

7. Street vendors peddle their goods along the sidewalk.

8. I needed Chimera in order to peddle Bellerophon.

9. M. It took all night to peddle here.

10. Peddle sometimes pleasant , stop and yearn after solicitting many people.

11. She has been told to peddle her papers elsewhere.

12. The man loves to peddle gossip all over the office.

13. But restaurants sometimes find it harder to peddle sweatshirts than swordfish.

14. As fewer women wanted to peddle Avon products, its sales sagged.

15. Popeye, the spy, smoking a pipe, peddle papa's papaya and pie.

16. Here they peddle their attack software and share information on new attack techniques.

17. Why does the farmer wish to sell individual grain to peddle food?

18. 20 But restaurants sometimes find it harder to peddle sweatshirts than swordfish.

19. Let the kids sell themselves the way the schools peddle their athletic programs.

20. His attempts to peddle his paintings around London's tiny gallery scene proved unsuccessful.

21. They even set up their own news agency to peddle anti-isolationist propaganda.

22. Alternative form of Colporteur··to peddle; to hawk to spread (gossip, accusation)

23. If she wants to peddle her renaming suggestion in China, she would have company.

24. On the other hand Indians peddle ahimsa, some spiritual mumbo - jumbo and little else.

25. Girls peddle hot spicy food in large aluminum bowls balanced gracefully on their heads.

26. Finally he found his game with whom he stood in to peddle his smuggled watches.

27. What does Bumboat mean? A small boat used to peddle provisions to ships anchored offshore

28. Go peddle your papers. I'm certainly not going to pay for the damage that wasn't my fault.

29. Terrorists thrive under conditions that allow them to peddle their warped and hateful messages to vulnerable people in conflict-stricken areas.

30. The two warring factions within the ruling elite, which fight primarily over the spoils of power while Abjectly serving corporate interests, peddle alternative realities

31. Clonking sound when moving forward without peddle assist, can be something simple like your wheel axle nut is loose, causing your tire to wobble

32. Literature can become the consumable that carries basket to peddle, but meanwhile, also became a kind of edge tool that safeguards people to convey the right.

33. Sure, peddle a few lightning rods, pick up a couple of bucks in a shell game fleece a yokel without even scratching him and you're a scalawag.

34. In many ways, Box’d pays homage to the Automats popular across Europe, the ones that peddle food for drunk patrons in the wee hours, or convenience snacks in …

35. AS CURBS on the advertising of tobacco increase and education on the health hazards of cigarette smoking spreads in the Western world, the giant tobacco companies have turned to the East to peddle their wares.

36. As Bonhoeffer said, they peddle “Cheap grace sold on the market like Cheapjacks’ wares.” There are too many men in the pulpit with a touch of charisma, a gift of gab, and a bag of gimmicks who go into ministry for personal gain, fame, and power.

37. ‘Look, no one Begrudges you your right to write books, peddle gossip or make money, which given the way your boss treats you, is understandable.’ ‘So when he retired from the Post Office two years ago at the age of 52, no one would have begrudged him an early rest.’