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Discover LudwigThe phrase "roadside stand" is correct and is commonly used in written English.
It refers to a small stand or booth that is set up on the side of a road to sell goods or products. Example: We stopped at a roadside stand on our way to the beach and bought freshly picked strawberries. Alternatively, the phrase can also be used figuratively to describe a person or business that operates independently and often in a humble or makeshift manner. Example: The author started out selling her books at a roadside stand, but now she's a bestselling author with books in bookstores all over the country.
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Page D2 COMO SE DICE 'PASSION?' In Chile, from the lips of revolutionaries to those standing at a roadside stand, the love of the empanada is prevalent.
Roadside stand jargon.
She earns $12 a day at another roadside stand.
Soulé instructed the driver to stop at a roadside stand.
I stopped at a roadside stand for sahina, a fried spinach-and-breadcrumbs patty.
Sold daily at the farm's roadside stand, 14 Tryon Street, South Glastonbury.
We have a roadside stand where it's sold, and do some wholesale.
DO stop at a roadside stand for a cup of our world-famous mulled cider.
The administrator who served under him sells fish at a roadside stand nearby.
Incidental Intelligence: A new roadside stand in New Jersey is called the Geiger Counter.
The produce is sold at a roadside stand on Route 29.
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