merchants (noun)

  • 111easterling — I. ˈēstərliŋ təl , təl noun ( s) Etymology: Middle English esterling, from ester, estern eastern + ling : a native of a country eastward of another used especially of German merchants from Baltic cities who traded in England or competed with the… …

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  • 112sta|ple — sta|ple1 «STAY puhl», noun, verb, pled, pling. –n. 1. a piece of metal with pointed ends bent into a U shape. Staples are driven into wood to hold a hook, pin, or bolt. 2. a bent piece of wire used to hold together papers or parts of a book. –v.t …

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  • 113Steel|yard — steel|yard1 «STEEL YAHRD, STIHL yuhrd», noun. a type of scale for weighing, having arms of unequal length. The longer one has a movable weight and is marked in units of weight; the shorter one has a hook for holding the object to be weighed.… …

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  • 114steel|yard — steel|yard1 «STEEL YAHRD, STIHL yuhrd», noun. a type of scale for weighing, having arms of unequal length. The longer one has a movable weight and is marked in units of weight; the shorter one has a hook for holding the object to be weighed.… …

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  • 115Romance languages — Romance Geographic distribution: Originally Southern Europe and parts of Africa; now also Latin America, Canada, parts of Lebanon and much of Western Africa Linguistic classification: Indo European Italic …

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  • 116Nahuatl — Mexican language redirects here. For Mexican dialect of the Spanish language, see Mexican Spanish. Nahuatl Nāhuatlahtōlli, Māsēwallahtōlli, Mexicano Nahua wo …

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  • 117Swahili language — For other uses, see Swahili (disambiguation). Swahili Language Kiswahili, اللغة السواحلية Spoken in  Burundi …

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  • 118English language — Language belonging to the Germanic languages branch of the Indo European language family, widely spoken on six continents. The primary language of the U.S., Britain, Canada, Australia, Ireland, New Zealand, and various Caribbean and Pacific… …

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  • 119ARAMAIC — ARAMAIC, an ancient northwestern semitic language spoken (to some extent) to this day. The entry is arranged according to the following outline: ancient aramaic and official aramaic sources syria and its neighboring countries iraq and iran egypt… …

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  • 120Anatolian languages — Branch of the Indo European language family spoken in Anatolia in the 2nd–1st millennia BC. The attested Anatolian languages are Hittite, Palaic, Luwian (Luvian), Hieroglyphic Luwian, Lycian, and Lydian. Hittite, by far the most copiously… …

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