How To Use Newsvendor In A Sentence
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W. H., and Son, Ltd, a firm of stationers, newsagents, and booksellers, originated in a small newsvendor's shop opened in London in Little Grosvenor Street in 1792 by Henry Walton Smith and his wife Anna.
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He stopped at a newsvendor, dropped in a coin, and waited for the reproducing mechanism to turn out a fresh paper.
Anything You Can Do ...
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More excitement was caused by a newsvendor mounting a box and holding aloft a single copy of the latest newspaper which he would sell to the highest bidder.
Sixteen Months in Four German Prisons Wesel, Sennelager, Klingelputz, Ruhleben
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One must not forget that the money used to pay the salaries was money which came from the worker, from the newsvendor, the bootblack or busboy, from people who received only 90 or 100 pesos.
MASS MEETING OF ELECTRIC POWER PLANT WORKERS
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Then the demons arrived, but instead of claws, they attacked us with the twine-cutting hook-rings of a newsvendor, and we were powerless to stop them.
Masked
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A newsvendor began to sing, and was joined in chorus --
The False Chevalier or, The Lifeguard of Marie Antoinette
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I scrambled over a pile of baggage and came within arm's length of the newsvendor.
Sixteen Months in Four German Prisons Wesel, Sennelager, Klingelputz, Ruhleben
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I was once walking through Liverpool Street station and the newsvendor had written the day's headline on a board.
News from the House of Sticks -
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Police have enough on, what with striking and shoving to the ground middle-aged newsvendors as they're walking home.
Times, Sunday Times
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We cannot listen to the BBC nowadays - I asked the newsvendor this morning about the situation.
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A newsvendor at the corner spreads a newspaper placard upon the wood pavement, pins the corners down with stones, and we glimpse something about: —
A Modern Utopia
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Police have enough on, what with striking and shoving to the ground middle-aged newsvendors as they're walking home.
Times, Sunday Times
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Its ability to price its product has also been under the cosh as other newsvendors cut prices to capture a bigger share of a shrinking market.
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From its humble beginnings in 1792, as a small newsvendor in Little Grosvenor Street, Henry Walton Smith's little retailing enterprise has become an intrinsic feature of the UK High Street scene.
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The newsvendor said he did not know, he did not understand.
Chivalry in the British Empire