street market
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English
[edit]Noun
[edit]street market (plural street markets)
- A temporary public market, normally set up outdoors on certain days of the week, often, but not always, in a street. Sometimes they can be found in a car park or in a market square.
- 1975, Philip Howard, London's River, page 107:
- The backbone of the old Cockney kingdom of Lambeth used to be Lambeth Walk, the famous old street market that runs parallel to the river behind Lambeth Road.
- 2007 September 2, Fiona Dunlop, “North Africa for food lovers.”, in The Guardian:
- Buy a bog-standard one at the street market in Souk Chaaria, near the Musee de Marrakech.
- 1956-2000, H. P. R. Finberg, Joan Thirsk, Edith H. Whetham, Stuart Piggott, H. E. Hallam, Edward Miller, G. E. Mingay, E. J. T. Collins, The agrarian history of England and Wales, page 992
- It was not the custom of London consumers to walk any distance for their food, or any other goods. As a result of this and the inability of the London County Council to establish a single authority to regulate existing markets and establish properly regulated new ones when the need arose, the irregular street market set up in densely populated districts was a feature of the capital. In 1891 there were 112, all unauthorised, and containing 5,292 stalls, of which 65 percent were set aside for the sale of perishable commodities.
Translations
[edit]outdoor market
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Further reading
[edit]- street market on Wikipedia.Wikipedia