small-timer

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See also: smalltimer

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From small time +‎ -er.

Noun

small-timer (plural small-timers)

  1. A person who is limited to small, petty or unimportant things.
    • 1934, Lew Levenson, chapter VIII, in Butterfly Man:
      She hated Ed Feinberg, the sleazy, lying, blood-sucking small-timer. Still he was a man; if he had called her up in the old days, in Seattle, she'd have entertained him.
    • 1992, Shashi Tharoor, Show Business: A Novel, page 144:
      The small-timers, as he put it, kept their currency in their homes, in safes, in false ceilings, under beds. When necessary, our tax people know where to look. The big-timers, however, use Swiss banks.
    • 1997, John Sandford, The Night Crew, Putnam, →ISBN, page 148:
      “If he's smooth, he don't have to worry too much about the cops, because he's such a small-timer, and when they come around, he cooperates. []

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