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		Definition of haberdasher in English: haberdashernoun ˈhabəˌdaʃəˈhæbərˌdæʃər 1British A dealer in small items used in sewing, such as buttons, zips, and thread. Example sentencesExamples -  The gallery is off Oxford Circus, next door to a haberdasher's, established back in 1902.
 -  In those days there was a lot going on in the village, which boasted not only seven grocers, but also seven pubs, two greengrocers, two butchers, a chemists, a haberdashers and a post office.
 -  Visit haberdashers to buy three zips for trousers I'm making.
 -  Early in the nineteenth century, the number of tailors, furriers, jewellers and haberdashers rose steeply.
 -  Among the shops nearby were a grocers, a haberdashers, a sweet shop and a tripe shop.
 
 2North American A dealer in men's clothing. 〈北美〉男子服饰用品商 Example sentencesExamples -  Drapers and milliners, haberdashers and tailors, mercers and glovers - these were the ubiquitous tradespeople and retailers of King Street.
 -  The stylish haberdasher who caters to style needs of the fashion-challenged, is a rarity in these days of mass production.
 -  Of all his roles, however, he's probably best known to the world at large as a haberdasher to celebrities.
 -  A tailor and a haberdasher enter with new clothes and a new hat for the couple's return to her house in Padua.
 -  Mirror makers, picture framers, artists, cutlers, wig-makers, glass sellers, haberdashers and tailors all jostled for business alongside numerous coffee houses and taverns.
 
 
 OriginMiddle English: probably based on Anglo-Norman French hapertas, perhaps the name of a fabric, of unknown origin. In early use the term denoted a dealer in a variety of household goods, later also specifically a hatter. Current senses date from the early 17th century.    Definition of haberdasher in US English: haberdashernounˈhabərˌdaSHərˈhæbərˌdæʃər 1North American A dealer in men's clothing. 〈北美〉男子服饰用品商 Example sentencesExamples -  The stylish haberdasher who caters to style needs of the fashion-challenged, is a rarity in these days of mass production.
 -  Of all his roles, however, he's probably best known to the world at large as a haberdasher to celebrities.
 -  Drapers and milliners, haberdashers and tailors, mercers and glovers - these were the ubiquitous tradespeople and retailers of King Street.
 -  Mirror makers, picture framers, artists, cutlers, wig-makers, glass sellers, haberdashers and tailors all jostled for business alongside numerous coffee houses and taverns.
 -  A tailor and a haberdasher enter with new clothes and a new hat for the couple's return to her house in Padua.
 
 2British A dealer in small items used in sewing. Example sentencesExamples -  Each year has brought worse news, with one manufacturer after another going out of business, and most towns left with one haberdasher - if they're lucky.
 -  They already appear to share the same barber, if not haberdasher.
 
 
 OriginMiddle English: probably based on Anglo-Norman French hapertas, perhaps the name of a fabric, of unknown origin. In early use the term denoted a dealer in a variety of household goods, later also specifically a hatter. Current senses date from the early 17th century.     |