What's the difference between hawker and huckster?

Hawker


Definition:

  • (n.) One who sells wares by crying them in the street; hence, a peddler or a packman.
  • (v. i.) To sell goods by outcry in the street.
  • (n.) A falconer.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Hawkers say Christmas time, when westerners flock to offload clothes to charity shops, brings in the biggest bales.
  • (2) Rudd's replacement, according to the veteran Labor campaign strategist Bruce Hawker, saw Labor's vote collapse: "Now, if an election was held tomorrow, Labor would lose 30 seats," he said.
  • (3) The choatic scenes on first night of the lunar new year were prompted by a government decision to clear a central Hong Kong market of unlicensed food hawkers.
  • (4) Hawker, like Crosby, also has a range of commercial and public sector clients.
  • (5) One small shareholder, who introduced himself as Captain Hawker, said BP had stepped into a “PR nightmare” by handing out such largesse when the rest of the country was mired in austerity.
  • (6) Hawker and Crosby have been longstanding rivals in Australia and according to one insider "are able to guess what the other guy is going to think before he thinks it".
  • (7) Compared with control subjects in identical classes, the hawkers were on the average 2 years older in age, were of poorer physique, and had lower hemoglobin values.
  • (8) No Tesco executives will ever board the jet, as he has put it up for sale – along with the rest of the Tesco fleet, which includes a Hawker 800 and two Cessna Citations.
  • (9) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Further footage has emerged showing the Hawker Hunter jet crashing onto the A27 in Shoreham, West Sussex after it failed to pull out of a loop manoeuvre However, Learmount said that safety at airshows was vigorously controlled and fatalities involving people other than pilots are extremely rare.
  • (10) People will still travel halfway across the country on their own dime to hear him speak, and hawkers still sell T-shirts at his events.
  • (11) Perplexed at the sight of hawkers on a highway, I strain to see what they are trying to sell me.
  • (12) I think it's up to the Labor party to get behind the leader,"  Bruce Hawker, longtime Labor strategist and the man who ran Rudd's challenge against Gillard last year, told ABC TV.
  • (13) Speaking on Sky News, Bruce Hawker – the man who orchestrated Kevin Rudd’s last leadership challenge – urged Rudd to stand in the ballot.
  • (14) Memories of the Conchords’ nearby flat at 41 Hawker Street provided the inspiration.
  • (15) Chantelle Kanimo, an 18-year-old hawker, said young Kenyans would not fight again.
  • (16) While footage of the Shoreham crash suggests casualties may have included people watching unofficially from the roadside, the Hawker crashed well away from the show’s crowd.
  • (17) (Hopefully Bishop can avoid the boilover that happened the last time she sought the job, in 2004 .. when she lost out to the Victorian MP, David Hawker.
  • (18) In a blogpost , Hawker wrote: "Cameron now lacks authenticity – his early centrist rhetoric bears no resemblance to the austerity drive he has mounted.
  • (19) Undeterred by the small army of security, several hundred cheery visitors had massed at the cathedral barriers by 6am, some wearing brightly colored shirts labeled by their parish, others lining up to buy Vatican flags from hawkers, and a few giving change to the homeless people who wandered near the edges.
  • (20) Such is the snail's pace of morning traffic that hawkers patrol the queues selling socks and phone chargers, McVitie's digestives and shaving kits.

Huckster


Definition:

  • (n.) A retailer of small articles, of provisions, and the like; a peddler; a hawker.
  • (n.) A mean, trickish fellow.
  • (v. i.) To deal in small articles, or in petty bargains.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Women in suits, mothers and daughters, hucksters selling “Nasty Women” pins and tens of thousands of members of the public came to Manhattan’s largest glass ceiling on Tuesday night, to await the result of a presidential election that many hoped would sweep away the highest gender barrier in US politics .
  • (2) It is no accident that so many of Twain's characters are hucksters and hustlers, or that deception and opportunism are abiding themes in his writing.
  • (3) The term "foodist" is actually much older, used from the late 19th century for hucksters selling fad diets (which is quite apt); and as late as 1987 one New York Times writer proposed it semi-seriously as a positive description, to replace the unlovely "gastronaut": "In the tradition of nudist, philanthropist and Buddhist, may I suggest 'foodist', one who is enthusiastic about good eating?"
  • (4) One huckster inside the de facto pope swag bazaar at the Columbus Circle subway station confirmed that he would resell any tickets – any tickets he obtained whatsoever – at a higher price than he had paid.
  • (5) We are Lewis and Clark and Sacajawea – pioneers who braved the unfamiliar, followed by a stampede of farmers and miners, entrepreneurs and hucksters.
  • (6) Still, free traders now are huckstering the TPP with promises of job gains.” Some critics of the trade pact say the White House staff has not done a good job briefing Obama about the deal and its critics’ arguments.
  • (7) This, in turn, leaves them prey to hucksters like Farage, who can claim to speak for them.
  • (8) How great has been the assault on tolerance by those who routinely and callously portray migrants as parasitic freeloaders and hucksters?
  • (9) Sophisticated consumers of the future will not only feed themselves better; they will be far less prone to the victims of ignorance, the misplaced enthusiasm of the food faddist, the hucksterism of the charlatan, and the malice of those who inflate their egos, and earn their living by alarming others.
  • (10) Voters may wise up to the hucksters who try to persuade them that everyone who supports the opposing party is Evil Incarnate.
  • (11) GOP primary opponents, and later Hillary Clinton, used the lawsuits to bash Trump as a huckster.
  • (12) It was that recalcitrant member any good club needs … The union, for all its failings, did not deserve to be betrayed by a huckster.
  • (13) In Bob Rafelson's The King Of Marvin Gardens, the Atlantic City of 1972 becomes the anteroom to Paradise for two brothers: one a depressive talk-radio host, the other a manic huckster.
  • (14) The hordes had moved on, she said, followed by an even larger caravan of hucksters, salesmen, water-carriers, fire-eaters and purveyors of cheap food.
  • (15) Marketing is defined as responding sensitively to human needs, not hucksterism, and is an appropriate activity for centers.
  • (16) What counts is the strength of Jason's very American illusions: that he can serve God and get rich, even now that God is dead, that Paradise is always just over the horizon, and that whatever happens, hucksterism and bullshit will always save the day.