0 a person who writes advertisements, especially for radio and television, or who sells things or brings ideas or people to the public's attention in a noisy, annoying way
1 a person who sells things or puts forward ideas in a very determined way that is often not completely honest
Itinerant quacks or charlatans abounded - and these were far from being automatically mere ignorant hucksters or snake-charming tricksters.
His huckster nationalism fuels his public appearances - as well as the sale of his books and tapes - and has given him rock star celebrity status.
Young women of such birth, living in a quiet country-house, and attending a village church hardly larger than a parlour, naturally regarded frippery as the ambition of a huckster's daughter.
What will strengthen them more than anything else will be shuffling and huckstering on the part of our rulers.
As regards domestic coal for the poorer classes, bellmen and hucksters are to receive as nearly as possible their 1917 quantities.
In the other two-thirds, the play of the market, the huckster value, will be the deciding factor.
But no; the bargaining, the huckstering must go on.
Has the action taken disclosed that many of these street hucksters and musicians are, in fact, evading their military or industrial service.