(business) The exchange or buying and selling of commodities; especially the exchange of merchandise, on a large scale, between different places or communities; extended trade or traffic.
the United States federal department that promotes and administers domestic and foreign trade (including management of the census and the patent office); created in 1913
For hundreds of years, through their commerce and colonizing, the Phoenicians maintained both the market for Tyrian purple and their capacity to produce it.
This lack of attention has turned the controversy into a political football, with Mottley promising that her government will solve the sewage crisis should it win this year's upcoming general elections and Minister of Commerce, Industry and Small Business Development Donville Inniss defending his government as the poop literally hit the fan — or at least the pavement.
But other European countries also wanted to expand their commerce with the New World, and Noronha was powerless to curb the growing illegal trade carried on by French, English, and Spanish navigators.
Over the last 20 years, the market share of the least-developed countries (700 million inhabitants) has decreased from 1 percent to 0.6 percent of the world’s total commerce.
As a center of commerce, it did business with the whole empire and saw the comings and goings of all sorts of people, who brought news of religious movements everywhere in the Roman world.
The present-day betrayal of trust —whether in commerce, politics, or religion or even in personal and family relationships— and the dire consequences are part of the Devil’s wicked scheme to bring woe on earth’s inhabitants.
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By this act he was forced to guarantee not only English civil liberties but also specifically the liberties of the city of London and freedom of commerce for its port and merchants.