newsagent
IPA: nˈuzˈeɪdʒʌnt
noun
- A retail business selling newspapers, magazines, and stationery; a stationer.
- The proprietor of such a business.
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Examples of "newsagent" in Sentences
- A newsagent is the manager, often the owner of a news agency.
- That would be like tabloid readers demanding that a newsagent stops selling broadsheets.
- You walk into a newsagent and instead of women porn magazines you see men porn magazines.
- Yesterday, the woman behind the counter at a newsagent in Milton Keynes called me "my darling" six times while selling me a newspaper.
- Three Asian men in their 40s, guarding a newsagent, discussed whether they should also take advantage of the apparent suspension of law.
- One of the QCs told me that, after my release, he'd gone into his local newsagent, and someone in the queue saw the headline in the paper and said: 'Wow!
- A reader recalls her personal and professional relationship with the paper, from her days working a Saturday job in the local newsagent to her career in the TV industry
- Lewis Cooke, who runs a newsagent which is four miles away in Skipton, continued to deliver newspapers and tinned items on to the porch of the shop so residents could come and collect their goods.
- Well before the beginning of the global economic crisis, a Brazilian street seller was on his way to becoming a very famous entrepreneur in the country by doing just one thing: selling popcorn, with a personal touch. 36 year old Valdir Novaki used to work as an itinerant farm labourer, until he arrived in Curitiba, in 1988, where he started working as a newsagent, then as a car park driver.
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