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Could you please offer a link to an online dictionary offering this definition? Thanks in advance!


....What definition? As a Brit, I'm telling you that's what we call people in these professions, anyone who comes to work on your house is a "trader" - you can choose to believe me or not lol.

Edit: and as another commenter pointed out, it's literally the government definition of someone running their own business - "sole trader".


I do believe you. As I did not find a definition with a quick search, I wondered whether it was some regional/dialect thing.


Perhaps it is (or at least was) to some extent regional. Oxford English Dictionary does not have the sense of "trader" that's being discussed here. It does however have "tradesman = A man engaged in a trade or a skilled manual occupation". It also has a second sense for that word: "tradesman = A man engaged in trade or the sale of goods and commodities" and one of the examples for that sense, from 1906, is this sentence:

> ‘Tradesman’, which in the north is used to denote a workman who has learned a trade, while in the south it is made to apply to a man who runs a business.

That was more than a hundred years ago and things may have moved on a bit since then, and in any case that sentence is quoted as an example rather than a claim by the editors of the dictionary, but perhaps despite my current place of residence I'm a northerner at heart?


I mean, one of the most well known sites in the UK for finding people for all kinds of jobs is literally called "TrustATrader.com":

https://www.trustatrader.com/trades

So no, I don't think that's a regional thing.




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