As well as greengrocer for someone who sells vegetables in a store, in the 1800s sellers were called hucksters. Hucksters drove a horse/buggy through neighborhoods, calling out that day's produce or products for sale. Women and children would run out of houses, the huckster would stop, and purchases were made from the back of the wagon. Later, men used enclosed trucks or pick-up trucks up through the 1960s. As well up through the 1940s, hucksters went through neighborhoods selling ice blocks (ice man) , housewares, handmade rag rugs and quilts, specialized spices and coffees. The "rag man" collected old fabrics and used clothing to sell as rags, or used them to make rag rugs.
Greengrocer was the term that is seldom used anymore. Vendor would be someone who has a roadside stand for selling vegetables.
A green grocer
A grocer, or green grocer.
It is called a green grocer.
I've hard them called greengrocers.
Greengrocer
Green grocer
Good morning divya
I am giya surya
A person who provides specialist food items may be called a 'purveyor' of those items. So someone who sells tea is a purveyor of tea.
A food seller!
A Green Groccer / A Green Dealer
They are called Vendors or Barkers by some people.
A market or a grocery store.
A person who sells food and small household goods
Are you talking about sausage
No, a chicken is definitely a vegetable. As it goes well with a vegetable roast. Logic indicates that it is a vegetable because of this
yes, vegetable is designed for vegetable, plant food is designed for plant food
An edible plant is a vegetable.
There is no special title for a person who picks tea leaves. They are simply referred to tea leaf pickers.
The person is a grocer (a seller of food and small household goods).