bread-monger
See also: breadmonger
English
Noun
bread-monger (plural bread-mongers)
- Alternative form of breadmonger
- 1841 May 29, The Manchester Courier, and Lancashire General Advertiser, volume XVII, number 858, page 3:
- The facts contained in the statement are such as tend to expose the fallacy of the cheap bread[-]mongers, and ought to be placed before every labourer in the kingdom.
- 1930 September 27, Illustrated Leicester Chronicle, number 802, page 16:
- The man who sells us our bread is not a baker, but a bread-monger.
- 1948 August 18, Holmes Alexander, “Price of Bread Stays Up—But Shouldn’t”, in The Salt Lake Tribune, volume 157, number 126, Salt Lake City, Utah, page 12:
- As an example of how the bread-mongers resist efforts to lower prices, consider this dialogue.
- 1949 November 24, Holmes Alexander, “War Is On Against Bread Mongers”, in Fort Myers News-Press, Fort-Myers, Fla., page 4:
- War Is On Against Bread Mongers […] Housewives—also their husbands and children—should give a rah-rah for Senator Guy Gillette, the handsome returnee from Iowa, who goes back to war on Nov. 28 against the flour and bread mongers. […] The base of these chemicals is a substance called mono-glyceride or sometimes di[-]glyceride. One pound of this gook, plus five pounds of water, can be used to replace six pounds of natural fats and oils in bread. That’s fine for the bread-mongers because it makes their product look better and last longer.
- 1953 January, The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, volume 285, page 182:
- The remedy is stated to be “to eliminate the owner, the power-monger, the bread-monger, the rent-monger, and, above all, their prostitute offspring, the advertiser and salesman. […]”
- 1981, Clive Dobson, “The Winter Birds”, in Feeding Wild Birds in Winter, Firefly Books, →ISBN, page 65:
- City squares, bus terminals and parks are favorite feeding grounds for pigeons. Groups of people at leisure waiting for the next train or having lunch in a park will usually be the audience for a parade of these avian bread-mongers.
- 1991 November 18, Gregory D. Finch, “Russia, nuclear weapons and food”, in The Indianapolis Star, volume 89, number 166, page A-7:
- Leave it to some self-serving patriot, drunk with the power of being named defense minister of a country that has not governed itself since electricity, to launch a “people’s attack” on those bread-mongers in the Ukraine.
- 2008, Greg Bauder, The Mystic Ill Man, Chipmunkapublishing, →ISBN, page 18:
- The father and son approached the bread-monger, and saw this dough-white grocer wave on the west streetside at them. […] " We need to stop at the bread-monger's to get some bread," the father said.
- 2013, Scott Lynch, The Republic of Thieves (book three of Gentleman Bastard Sequence), London: Gollancz, →ISBN, page 461:
- ‘What this means, dear Camorri, is that we hire our bit players and spear-carriers. Then we announce the times of our shows, and if we don’t manage to put them on, we’re bloody liable. To the ditch-tenders, the beer- and bread-mongers, the cushion furnishers, the envoy of ceremonies, and the countess herself, gods forbid.’
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