What is another word for hawking?

Pronunciation: [hˈɔːkɪŋ] (IPA)

Hawking refers to the act of selling goods on the street, typically by shouting out the name of the product to attract potential customers. Synonyms for hawking include peddling, vending, touting, and canvassing. Peddling is often associated with the sale of goods on the street, such as food or clothing. Vending refers to selling items from a machine, such as a vending machine. Touting is often used in the travel industry, referring to the promotion of a particular hotel or destination. Canvassing is often used in political campaigns, referring to the act of going door-to-door to gather support for a candidate or cause.

Synonyms for Hawking:

What are the paraphrases for Hawking?

Paraphrases are restatements of text or speech using different words and phrasing to convey the same meaning.
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What are the hypernyms for Hawking?

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

What are the opposite words for hawking?

Hawking is the act of selling goods or services, usually by street vendors. However, there are multiple antonyms for the word which refer to the opposite of selling. Buying is the act of acquiring goods or services in exchange for money, which is an antonym of hawking. Another antonym is keeping or withholding, which means to keep or hold onto something without selling it. In a similar vein, stockpiling refers to accumulating goods without the intention of selling them. Finally, hoarding implies collecting goods in excess and accumulating them for personal use rather than selling. These antonyms capture the idea of retaining goods rather than selling them.

What are the antonyms for Hawking?

Usage examples for Hawking

I am never happy when you are out alone on these distant hawking excursions.
"The White Gauntlet"
Mayne Reid
It does appear, as if it were my gauntlet-at least it is very like the one I lost the other day, when out a-hawking; and for the want of which my poor skin got so sadly scratched.
"The White Gauntlet"
Mayne Reid
But for them, I shouldn't go hawking to-day-least of all, with him as my companion.
"The White Gauntlet"
Mayne Reid

Famous quotes with Hawking

  • Celebrity is hawking make-up, cars, everything; it's shifted.
    Janice Dickinson
  • I don't like hawking 'round other people's memories. That wasn't part of the deal when I was born.
    Hugo Pratt
  • The mere management of arms, though essentially requisite, was not sufficient of itself to form an accomplished knight in the times of chivalry; it was necessary for him to be endowed with beauty, as well as with strength and agility of body; he ought to be skilled in music, to dance gracefully, to run with swiftness, to excel in wrestling, to ride well, and to perform every other exercise befitting his situation. To these were to be added urbanity of manners, strict adherence to the truth, and invincible courage. Hunting and hawking skilfully were also acquirements that he was obliged to possess, and which were usually taught him as soon as he was able to endure the fatigue that they required.
    Joseph Strutt
  • As in hunting, so in hawking, the sportsmen had their peculiar impressions, and therefore the tyro in the art of falconry is recommended to learn the following arrangement of terms as they were to be applied to the different kinds of birds assembled in companies. A sege of herons, and of bitterns; an herd of swans, of cranes, and of curlews; a dopping of sheldrakes; a spring of teels; a covert of cootes; a gaggle of geese; a badelynge of ducks; a sord or sute of mallards; a muster of peacoccks; a nye of pheasants; a bevy of quails; a covey of partridges; a congregation of plovers; a flight of doves; a dule of turtles; a walk of snipes; a fall of woodcocks; a brood of hens; a building of rooks; a murmuration of starlings; an exaltation of larks; a flight of swallows; a host of sparrows; a watch of nightingales; and a charm of goldfinches.
    Joseph Strutt
  • We may also observe, that, upon these occasions, the female Nimrods dispensed with the method of riding best suited to the modesty of the sex, and sat astride on the saddle like the men; but this indecorous custom, I trust, was never general, nor of long continuance, even with the heroines who were most delighted with these masculine exercises. An author of the seventeenth century speaks of another fashion, adopted by the fair huntresses of the town of Bury in Suffolk. "The Bury ladies," says he, "that used hawking and hunting, were once in a great vaine of wearing breeches," which it seems gave rise to many severe and ludicrous sarcasms. The only argument in favour of this habit, was decency in case of an accident. But in a manner more consistent with the delicacy of the sex, that is, by refraining from those dangerous recreations.
    Joseph Strutt

Related words: hawking radiation equation, hawking radiation wavelength, hawking radiation model

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