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peddle
[ped-l]
verb (used with object)
to carry (small articles, goods, wares, etc.) from place to place for sale at retail; hawk.
to deal out, distribute, or dispense, especially in small quantities.
to peddle radical ideas.
to sell (drugs) illicitly.
verb (used without object)
to go from place to place with goods, wares, etc., for sale at retail.
to occupy oneself with trifles; trifle.
peddle
/ ˈpɛdəl /
verb
to go from place to place selling (goods, esp small articles)
(tr) to sell (illegal drugs, esp narcotics)
(tr) to advocate (ideas) persistently or importunately
to peddle a new philosophy
archaic, (intr) to trifle
Other Word Forms
- repeddle verb (used with object)
- unpeddled adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of peddle1
Word History and Origins
Origin of peddle1
Example Sentences
The growing allure of watches with A-list history was enticing people to peddle dubious timepieces.
But there was a time when their importance, along with the activists who peddled their ideas, rivaled those of politicians themselves.
It also came under attack from commentators who bemoaned its lack of diversity and claimed it peddled middle-class values.
“Dangerous rhetoric that ICE agents are ‘kidnapping’ illegal immigrants is being recklessly peddled by politicians and echoed in the media to inflame the public and discredit our courageous federal agents,” U.S.
In an interview with The Times, Garcia said he has long viewed Kennedy as a dangerous “conspiracy theorist” who has “peddled in all sorts of lies” about HIV, vaccines and other medical science.
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