What is another word for bookseller?

Pronunciation: [bˈʊksɛlə] (IPA)

A bookseller is an individual who sells books for a living. However, there are many other words that can be used as synonyms for this profession. Some common terms include book vendor, book peddler, book merchant, book dealer, and book trader. Other synonyms include bookshop owner, book purveyor, book retailer, and book distributor. Regardless of the specific term used, booksellers play a crucial role in the world of literature and are important to the publishing industry. They offer readers access to a vast array of books and help connect books with their intended audience.

Synonyms for Bookseller:

What are the paraphrases for Bookseller?

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What are the hypernyms for Bookseller?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the hyponyms for Bookseller?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.

Usage examples for Bookseller

He began work in London about 1496 in partnership with Jean Barbier and another printer or bookseller whose initials were I. H., probably Jean Huvin of Rouen.
"Fine Books"
Alfred W. Pollard
Wolfe, who had come to England from Gelderland, was at first a bookseller, and was employed by various distinguished persons as a letter-carrier between England and Germany.
"Fine Books"
Alfred W. Pollard
Between 1574 and 1580 twenty-six were produced by John Ross, and on his death Henry Charteris, a bookseller, took over his material, and by the time of his death in 1599 had printed forty more.
"Fine Books"
Alfred W. Pollard

Famous quotes with Bookseller

  • Your second-hand bookseller is second to none in the worth of the treasures he dispenses.
    Leigh Hunt
  • I wonder how so insupportable a thing as a bookseller was ever permitted to grow up in the Commonwealth. Many of our modern booksellers are but needless excrements, or rather vermin.
    George Wither
  • I had not been two weeks in the United States before someone said to me: "Well, at any rate, there is Cabell." That was a new name to me. I was given to read. My excitement during the discovery of that perverse and eloquent testament was one of the happiest moments of my American stay. I spent then a wild and eccentric search after his earlier masterpieces. Inside the cover of there were the titles of no less than fourteen books. I could see from the one which I held in my hand that Mr. Cabell was no careless writer. He had been writing then for many years and he was unobtainable! "No, he has never had any success," a bookseller told me. "No one ever asks for his books." That situation is now changed. There are, I imagine, a great many more persons in the United States of America asking for than are likely to obtain it. That good, at any rate, an idiotic censorship has done.
    James Branch Cabell
  • I used to think I should like to be a bookbinder or bookseller it seemed to me a most delightful trade and I wished or thought of nothing better. More lately I thought I should be a minister, it seemed so serious and useful a profession, and I entered but little into the merits of religion and the duties of a minister. Every one dissuaded me from the notion, and before I arrived at any age to require a real decision, science had claimed me.
    William Stanley Jevons
  • I received a letter from you with satisfaction, having long been desirous of any occasion of testifying my regard for you, and particularly of acknowledging the pleasure your Version of Vida's Poetick had afforded me. I had it not indeed from your bookseller, but read it with eagerness, and think it both a correct and a spirited translation. I am pleased to have been (as you tell me) the occasion of your undertaking that work: that is some sort of merit; and, if I have any in me, it really consists in an earnest desire to promote and produce, as far as I can, that of others. [...] I am obliged to you, Sir, for expressing a much higher opinion of me than I know I deserve: the freedom with which you write is yet what obliges and pleases me more; and it is with sincerity that I say, I would rather be thought by every ingenious man in the world, his servant, than his rival.
    Christopher Pitt

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