0 someone who sells goods informally in public places
Others became hawkers of the locality in cheap goods, mainly glass and brassware.
Not surprisingly, many hawkers of information took their trade with them when they set out for the new world where some met an ignominious end.
For every hawker or costermonger found in the sample (for 1881) aged over 65 there was more than one cleric.
A customer walks up to a hawker selling fruit.
The government commissioner's plea for a further expansion in the regulation of trade practices also had some resonance: the hawkers' regulation was strengthened in 1936-40.
Instead of providing a 'host' around which less successful troupes, showmen, hawkers and other 'parasites' could gather, these performers took up residence in purpose-built theatres in the centre of town.
Example (11) shows an interaction between a hawker who sells sundries and a customer; it contains a customer's evaluation of the merchandise.
As to the old basket women or fish hawkers, they were a hardy race and went from door to door with the fresh fish.