Advertisement
Advertisement
door-to-door
[ dawr-tuh-dawr, dohr-tuh-dohr ]
adjective
- calling, selling, canvassing, etc., at each house or apartment in an area, town, or the like:
a door-to-door poll.
- sent direct from the point of pickup to the point of delivery, as a shipment or order of merchandise.
- covering the complete route of a door-to-door shipment, delivery, etc.:
door-to-door carrying charges; door-to-door insurance.
adverb
- in a door-to-door manner.
door to door
adjective
- (of selling, canvassing, etc) from one house to the next
- (of journeys, deliveries, etc) direct
Word History and Origins
Origin of door-to-door1
Example Sentences
The Liberian AIDS commission is now going door-to-door to administer antiretroviral medications to known patients.
The next green IPO will be from Vivint, a Utah-based company that sells solar panels door-to-door.
That makes voter registration and door-to-door campaigning more important than ever.
Her father lost his job at an opera company because he was Jewish, and had to find work as a door-to-door salesman.
In the distance, hugging a T-wall, two Humvees idled door-to-door with their headlights on.
They manufacture simple compositions like polishing waxes and sell them from door-to-door.
Just before the battle of Cerro Gordo there was a door-to-door canvass at Mexico; but only small sums can have been picked up.
Gracious, you wouldn't have to sell from door-to-door, would you?
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse