English
Etymology
sales + -man
Noun
salesman (plural salesmen)
- A man whose job it is to sell things, either in a shop/store or elsewhere.
See also
Hypernyms
Derived terms
Translations
man whose job it is to sell things
- Albanian: shitës (sq) m
- American Sign Language: FlatO@InsideChesthigh-PalmDown-FlatO@InsideChesthigh-PalmDown Nod FlatO@InsideChesthigh-PalmForward-FlatO@Inside-PalmForward OpenB@SideChesthigh-OpenB@SideChesthigh OpenB@SideTrunkhigh-OpenB@SideTrunkhigh
- Arabic: بَيَّاع (bayyāʕ)
- Catalan: venedor (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 推銷員/推销员 (zh) (tuīxiāoyuán), 推销员 (zh) (tuīxiāoyuán)
- Dutch: verkoper (nl) m
- Finnish: myyjä (fi), myyntimies (fi)
- French: vendeur (fr) m
- Friulian: venditôr m
- German: Verkäufer (de) m
- Greek: πωλητής (el) m (politís)
- Hungarian: eladó (hu)
- Icelandic: sölumaður m
- Italian: venditore (it) m
- (deprecated template usage)
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- Japanese: 店員 (ja) (てんいん, ten'in), セールスマン (sērusuman), 販売員 (はんばいいん, hanbaiin)
- Kabuverdianu: bendedor
- Korean: 판매원 (ko) (panmaewon) (販賣員 (ko))
- Latin: institor m
- Macedonian: продавач m (prodavač)
- Malay: jurujual
- Norwegian: selger (no) m
- Polish: sprzedawca (pl)
- Portuguese: vendedor (pt) m
- Romanian: vânzător (ro) m
- Russian: продаве́ц (ru) m (prodavéc), торго́вец (ru) (torgóvec)
- Scottish Gaelic: fear-reic m, reiceadair m, ceannaiche m
- Spanish: vendedor (es) m
- Swedish: försäljare (sv), köpman (sv), handlare (sv)
- Yiddish: פֿאַרקויפֿער m (farkoyfer)
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