doorknock
English
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
doorknock (plural doorknocks)
- (Australia, New Zealand) A campaign of going from house to house knocking on doors, such as for a charity appeal.
- 1995, John Montague Gurney; N. E. Renton, Successful Clubs, page 53:
- To run a doorknock you need volunteer collectors — lots of them. But because there are so many doorknocks each year, collectors are overloaded and it is difficult to recruit new ones.
So what is the answer?
Verb
doorknock (third-person singular simple present doorknocks, present participle doorknocking, simple past and past participle doorknocked)
- (chiefly Australia, New Zealand) To participate in a campaign of going from house to house knocking on doors; to knock on the door (of a house) during such a campaign.
- 1979, Fatma Dharamsi, et al., Harlesden Community Project, Community Work And Caring For Children: A Community Project In An Inner City Local Authority, page 440,
- During the doorknocking local residents had talked about other issues.
- 2007, Philip Hughes; Alan Black; Peter Kaldor, Building Stronger Communities, page 156:
- With some exceptions, doorknocking is likely to elicit a large number of small donations but relatively few large donations.
- 2007, Robert Macklin, Kevin Rudd: The Biography, unnumbered page:
- ‘He doorknocked thirty-two thousand houses,’ Thérèse says. ‘I doorknocked with him at weekends. That′s one way to get fit, especially when every house that I doorknocked was high-set, but I took the formal period of the campaign off.’
- 1979, Fatma Dharamsi, et al., Harlesden Community Project, Community Work And Caring For Children: A Community Project In An Inner City Local Authority, page 440,
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