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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Hackman

Hackman \Hack"man\ (h[a^]k"man), n.; pl. Hackmen (h[a^]k"men). The driver of a hack or carriage for public hire.

Wiktionary
hackman

n. The driver of a hack

Wikipedia
Hackman

Hackman was a cutlery and cookware company founded in Finland in 1790. The Hackman brand is now owned by Iittala Group, which was acquired by Fiskars Corporation in 2007.

Hackman is a prestigious brand name in Finland; according to a 2008 survey which included both Finnish and international brands, it was the fifth most respected brand among consumers.

Hackman is also a different company which produces professional kitchen equipment. This Hackman is owned by the Metos Group, which in turn is owned by the Ali Group, Italy.

Hackman (disambiguation)

Hackman is a cutlery company founded in Finland in 1790.

Hackman may also refer to:

  • Hackman (surname)
  • Hackmans Gate, hamlet in Worcestershire, England
  • Samuel E. Hackman Building, historic building in Hartsburg, Missouri
Hackman (surname)

Hackman is an English surname. Notable people of the name include the following:

  • Gene Hackman (b. 1930), American actor
  • James Hackman (1752-1779), English murderer
  • Luther Hackman (b. 1974), American baseball player
  • Paul Hackman (1952-1992), Canadian guitarist

Usage examples of "hackman".

Burt Reynolds, Gene Hackman, and Jane Fonda were dressed up as villagers, rendered unrecognisable by makeup, so desperate to be in this movie that they were willing to be unbilled extras.

There were darkies and loafers and hackmen, and also vague individuals, the loosest and blankest he had ever seen anywhere, with tufts on their chins, toothpicks in their mouths, hands in their pockets, rumination in their jaws and diamond pins in their shirt-fronts, who looked as if they had sauntered over from Pennsylvania Avenue to while away half an hour, forsaking for that interval their various slanting postures in the porticoes of the hotels and the doorways of the saloons.

Hackman, who, in a fit of frantick jealous love, had shot Miss Ray, the favourite of a nobleman.

Our American tourists, who were accustomed to the clamor of the hackmen here, and expected to be assaulted by a horde of wild Comanches in plain clothes, and torn limb from baggage, if not limb from limb, were unable to account for this silence, and the absence of the common highwaymen, until they remembered that the State had bought the Falls, and the agents of the government had suppressed many of the old nuisances.