English edit

Noun edit

hand-shaker (plural hand-shakers)

  1. Alternative form of handshaker
    • 1894, Alfred Emanuel Smith, Francis Walton, New Outlook - Volume 49, page 706:
      Why, a hand-shake, if it's done in the right way, will send a current of warm cheer rippling through the entire day of both parties, both of the hand-shaker and the hand-shaken.
    • 1996, Gunnar Myrdal, An American Dilemma, Volume 2: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy, →ISBN:
      In general, the American is a great and indiscriminate hand-shaker.
    • 2010, Max Allan Collins, You Can't Stop Me, →ISBN:
      When confronted with a death-grip hand-shaker, the cop had told Harrow, just extend your forefinger.
    • 2013, Tracy Daugherty, The Boy Orator: A Novel, →ISBN:
      He was more comfortable behind the scenes, he admitted, writing articles, drafting speeches for others. “I don't really have what it takes to be a hand-shaker or a baby-kisser,” he said.