[
UK
/vˈɪktʃuːˌɔːlɐ/
]
NOUN
- an innkeeper (especially British)
- a supplier of victuals or supplies to an army
How To Use victualler In A Sentence
- I was delighted with the country victualler terrine that came with two slices of fresh toast and mixed salad leaves.
- Derek Haworth, former chairman of the licensed victuallers association, said: ‘We already have to pay both council and business tax?’
- Bakers, victuallers, taverners, hostelers, and sometimes attorneys were disqualified from election as mayor or bailiff in the fifteenth century.
- He also noted that if the ‘chief victualler and the chief cook got on well the quality was good’.
- Of the remaining half, only three were designated as labourers; the rest were artisans such as bakers, grocers, tailors, and victuallers.
- The profits from these activities provided work for an endless array of builders, carriage-makers, tailors, seamstresses, domestic servants, cab-drivers, and victuallers.
- A GAA county development officer, the former victualler surprised many when leaving the meat trade for a coaching role.
- A GAA county development officer, the former victualler surprised many when leaving the meat trade for a coaching role.
- Part of the building became a licensed premises in 1729 when William Smith, victualler, and his wife Mary, purchased a garden at the rear of their home and erected a brewhouse on the site.
- Bakers, victuallers, taverners, hostelers, and sometimes attorneys were disqualified from election as mayor or bailiff in the fifteenth century.