e-commerce merchant

  • 91Joseph Fry (tea merchant) — Joseph Fry (21 April 1777 28 August 1861) was a tea dealer and an unsuccessful banker. He was the husband of Elizabeth Fry, prison reformer.Parental familyHe was born in London 21 April 1777, the youngest of the three sons, (one of whom died aged …

    Wikipedia

  • 92law merchant — n. all the rules and usages originating in the customs of merchants and now applied to dealings in trade and commerce, where not changed by statute; mercantile or commercial law …

    English World dictionary

  • 93navire de commerce — prekinis laivas statusas T sritis Gynyba apibrėžtis Komercinius vežimus atliekantis laivas, išskyrus upių, upių žiočių laivus ir laivus, plaukiojančius tik uosto ribose. atitikmenys: angl. merchant ship pranc. navire de commerce; navire marchand …

    NATO terminų aiškinamasis žodynas

  • 94Delivery (commerce) — For other uses, see Delivering (disambiguation). Delivery man redirects here. For the baseball award, see Major League Baseball Delivery Man Award. Delivery is the process of transporting goods. Most goods are delivered through a transportation… …

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  • 95Card security code — The Card security code is located on the back of MasterCard, Visa and Discover credit or debit cards and is typically a separate group of 3 digits to the right of the signature strip …

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  • 96market — [12] The Latin word for ‘goods to be sold’ was merx (source of English commerce, merchant, and mercury). From it was derived the verb mercārī ‘buy’, and its past participle produced the noun mercātus ‘trade, market’. In Vulgar Latin this became… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 97Eliza Tibbets — Eliza Tibbets, along with her husband Luther C. Tibbets, is best known as the founder of the California citrus industry. [ California State Parks, California Citrus State Historical Park. (Sacramento: 2002); U.S. Congress. House, Congressman… …

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  • 98mercury — [14] The Roman god Mercury got his name from his original role as patron of trade and tradesmen: Latin Mercurius was a derivative of merx ‘goods for sale’ (source of English commerce and merchant). The inspiration for the medieval application of… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 99market — [12] The Latin word for ‘goods to be sold’ was merx (source of English commerce, merchant, and mercury). From it was derived the verb mercārī ‘buy’, and its past participle produced the noun mercātus ‘trade, market’. In Vulgar Latin this became… …

    Word origins

  • 100mercury — [14] The Roman god Mercury got his name from his original role as patron of trade and tradesmen: Latin Mercurius was a derivative of merx ‘goods for sale’ (source of English commerce and merchant). The inspiration for the medieval application of… …

    Word origins