handout$33663$ - meaning and definition. What is handout$33663$
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What (who) is handout$33663$ - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Handouts; Government handout; Cash handout
  • Unemployed men queued outside a depression-era soup kitchen in Chicago 1931

handout         
n. (colloq.)
alms
1) to give smb. a handout
2) to ask for a handout
handout         
(handouts)
1.
A handout is a gift of money, clothing, or food, which is given free to poor people.
Each family is being given a cash handout of six thousand rupees.
N-COUNT
2.
If you call money that is given to someone a handout, you disapprove of it because you believe that the person who receives it has done nothing to earn or deserve it.
...the tendency of politicians to use money on vote-buying handouts rather than on investment in the future...
N-COUNT [disapproval]
3.
A handout is a document which contains news or information about something and which is given, for example, to journalists or members of the public.
Official handouts describe the Emperor as 'particularly noted as a scholar'.
N-COUNT
4.
A handout is a paper containing a summary of information or topics which will be dealt with in a lecture or talk.
N-COUNT
handout         
¦ noun
1. an amount of money or other aid given to a needy person or organization.
2. a piece of printed information provided free of charge, especially to accompany a lecture or advertise something.

Wikipedia

Handout

A handout is something given freely or distributed free to those in need.

It can refer to government welfare or a charitable gift, and it may take the form of money, food, or other necessities.

During the Great Depression, many people lived entirely on handouts of one kind or another when they could not afford to buy food. The term became especially popular among hobos, who developed a system of signs and symbols to describe the nature, quantity, and availability of handouts.

The term "handout" is used specifically in sociology and welfare analysis to identify direct payments or provision of goods, and to distinguish them from other forms of welfare support such as low-interest loans, subsidized housing, or medical care. However, some people feel it has a negative connotation, with the implication that a handout is unearned and undeserved. "Give a hand up, not a handout" is a common remark among proponents of workfare or other welfare-to-work systems. Another dichotomy characterization is "to be lifted up by a rope" vs stepping up onto a "ladder of opportunity". A well-known saying along this line is "Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime". The term "government handout" is often applied to both welfare systems as well as corporate welfare or pork. The biography of Star Parker (disclosed in detail in her books) is of a person who has lived on both sides of the dichotomy.