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Huckster   /hˈəkstər/   Listen
Huckster

noun
1.
A seller of shoddy goods.  Synonym: cheap-jack.
2.
A person who writes radio or tv advertisements.
verb
(past & past part. huckstered; pres. part. huckstering)
1.
Sell or offer for sale from place to place.  Synonyms: hawk, monger, peddle, pitch, vend.
2.
Wrangle (over a price, terms of an agreement, etc.).  Synonyms: chaffer, haggle, higgle.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Huckster" Quotes from Famous Books



... prisoner, savage, peasant, spirit, camel's leg or lion, a devil or a genie, a slave or a eunuch, black or white; always ready to feign joy or sorrow, pity or astonishment, to utter cries that never vary, to hold his tongue, to hunt, or fight for Rome or Egypt, but always at heart—a huckster still. ...
— The Girl with the Golden Eyes • Honore de Balzac

... band, the captain followed on horseback, his bed and all his necessaries being laid upon his own horse equally poised on both sides, and over all was spread a covering of red felt of China, on the top of which sat the captain crosslegged, like a huckster between two paniers. Such as were old or weak in the back had a staff artificially fixed on the pannel, on which he could lean back and rest himself as if sitting in a choir. We met the captain-general of this new garrison two days after meeting his first band, having in the mean time met ...
— A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Volume IX. • Robert Kerr

... boastfulness, For on the shield that with its brazen round His body fenced, he bore our city's shame, The rav'ning Sphynx, in burnished effigy Empaled, and grasping in her felon claws The limbs of a Cadmean citizen; Which on the bearer drew a shower of darts. Battle to huckster is not his intent, Nor to have marched so far and marched in vain. His name Parthenopaeus, Arcady His home, Argos his nurse, whom to requite He threatens that from which heaven save ...
— Specimens of Greek Tragedy - Aeschylus and Sophocles • Goldwin Smith

... repetition are all effective aids in the presentation of argument. The speeches of great orators are replete with expressions of this sort. Burke, in his Speech on Conciliation, says, "Despotism itself is obliged to truck and huckster"; "The public," he said, "would not have patience to see us play the game out with our adversaries; we must produce our hand"; "Men may lose little in property by the act which takes away all their freedom. When a man is robbed of a trifle ...
— Practical Argumentation • George K. Pattee

... story of sunrise thrift and industry as it cried to you the early peas or the wood or the melons of the season. You may remember, too, how perplexing, how fantastic, many of those cries were, making it impossible for you to understand what they meant, or why a wood-huckster, for example, should give vent to such lachrymose sentimentality in vending his fagots. But quite different is the Paris marchand. With a physiognomy of voice—if the expression be pardoned—quite as marked as the cockney's, what he says is yet perfectly clear, often ...
— Lippincott's Magazine, Volume 11, No. 26, May, 1873 • Various


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