The pretended purpose of it was to encourage the manufactures, and to increase the commerce of Great Britain. |
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Apart from being deputy premier he also held the portfolios of commerce and trade, small business and regional development. |
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Again activism and commerce are neither contradictory nor mutually exclusive. |
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The Athenian mix of culture and commerce was as apparent in art as architecture. |
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It is feared that, as a practical matter, some varieties of arabica coffees could actually cease to exist in world commerce. |
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Thirteen years later, the OncoMouse is a prime example of the hazards of mixing science and commerce. |
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Five years back, business dreamed of the efficient nirvana implied by frictionless commerce. |
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Trade and commerce have had a formative influence on America from the Colonial Era onward. |
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This has not only slowed down the whole process of integration but has also proved to be irksome to stakeholders in commerce. |
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It is plainly ridiculous to expect artwork on the order of what one finds on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in ordinary places of commerce. |
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For it is said that it was two months after the marriage before she had commerce with you. |
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They're employing people and creating commerce, and they're dispelling old stereotypes about gay business owners. |
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I would assume that a prostitute, in ordinary social commerce, does not admit to her profession. |
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Reputations are crucial for the effective functioning of human society and commerce. |
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The mines provided wage labor and required a network of commerce to supply explosives, chemicals, timber for pit props, and food for the miners. |
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Even though recent decisions have pared back the scope of federal power somewhat, the federal commerce power remains broad.
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Electronic commerce, or e-commerce as it is known, is beginning to revolutionize the way firms do business. |
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Few bands have traversed the no man's land between art and commerce quite like The Dears. |
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The transformation of ritual into commerce represents a movement of Aboriginal ''business'' into something else. |
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We left Chichi to its extraordinary mix of high religion and high commerce and returned to Antigua full of anticipation. |
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Through a truly imperial application of synecdoche, this georgic trajectory of empire occludes the dark sides of commerce and conquest. |
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The four-decked boat reflects the growing national importance of steamboat travel for commerce and pleasure. |
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Planned economic growth was accompanied by the socialization of agriculture and of private commerce and industry. |
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For all of its many virtues, this literature has generally privileged issues of rights and citizenship over commerce and sociability. |
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A member of the Party and a former commerce minister, he is considered an advocate of free-market policies. |
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The Sava and Danube Rivers used to bring ships and commerce into the capital. |
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The chief commerce is in silk, which is carried on along the River and its numerous affluents and canals. |
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Although the Kyrgyz language is spoken in the home, most Kyrgyz also speak Russian, which is the language of business and commerce. |
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The obvious advantage to this is the vastly increased speed with which commerce can be done over modern communications. |
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If we focus on employment, we lose sight of the subtle but very real benefits that commerce and free trade bring. |
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The Khojas were all engaged either in retail trade or commerce, and doing well in both. |
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A variety of shanties and shelters can be attached to these houses as households engage in petty commerce and services. |
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It is no art, just a sad, quite sad, attempt at craft, clever and crude, for commerce. |
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Long-distance trade both east and west is well attested, as well as internal commerce in artefacts and foodstuffs. |
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Come to think of it, the technique of direct selling was prevalent right from the early days of trade and commerce. |
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Participants can interact with agribusiness officials who are actively pursuing business ventures using electronic commerce. |
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Universities and TAFEs use similar strategies to court links with industry and commerce. |
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How have Vinton and Turpin joined hands to knead together art and commerce, creativity and discipline? |
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But for heaven's sake, let's not intellectualise an endeavour that reeks of commerce and commodification. |
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The Confederate navy was spectacularly successful with its commerce raiders, which harassed and destroyed Union ships in global warfare. |
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There remains the question whether such restriction on the production of goods for commerce is a permissible exercise of the commerce power. |
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Mungo uses the language of commerce to convey his utmost tenderness toward Betty. |
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Reid also emphasizes that kabakas did not exert much control over commerce since Ganda outside the capital traded relatively freely. |
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Rapid travel in small aircraft cabins, and increased trade and commerce facilitate a lightning worldwide spread. |
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We have changed our lives in astounding ways since civilization began, and yet commerce has remained a constant. |
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Today it is a city, much like other major capitals, choked with traffic and bustling with commerce. |
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What cordial relations of amity or commerce are possible under such conditions? |
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Farming, herding, fishing, seafaring, commerce, and crafts were the historical mainstays of the economy. |
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With the downfall of the Mughal Empire in the mid 1700s, commerce shifted to the sea ports, and the age of camel caravans drew to a close. |
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State laws relating to immigration were struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court as infringements of Congress's power to regulate foreign commerce. |
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Waterborne commerce, vital to any archipelago, was conducted in crude sailing craft. |
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The Second Empire, generally avid for control and order, sought to regularize commerce by the reconstruction of the central market. |
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In this country we have the resources and expertise to build infrastructures and basis for commerce abroad. |
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Third, Congress has the power to regulate activities that substantially affect interstate commerce. |
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It is best known for surveys and research into consumer patterns of online shopping and commerce. |
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This international trade founded inland commerce between Yolngu and other Aboriginal people. |
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Bangkok is a city where commerce and pleasure happily share the same parts of town. |
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He examines the issue of merchant ships being used as Royal Navy auxiliaries for commerce raiding and patrol duties. |
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They are servants of the Government and do not become involved in commerce unless supporting official trade missions. |
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If ports of embarkation or debarkation can be closed, neither commerce nor seaborne reinforcement or resupply can flow. |
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As art, it was essentially a potboiler, refusing any commerce with physical or psychological detail. |
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Bombed-out buildings house dens of illicit commerce, while bridges and river banks swarm with a second society. |
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English is the language of interethnic communication, administration, government, trade and commerce, and education. |
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She loathes Hollywood, finds it distasteful and banal, hates the idea of her art being tainted by commerce. |
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Cypriots were influenced by traders from the Minoan civilization, who developed a script for Cypriot commerce. |
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Chambers of commerce and boards of trade are organizations of the same general type as business leagues. |
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Art can be chosen over commerce, and idealism can trump pragmatism, all you need is to stick to a contra mundum attitude. |
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Many of them spend a large part of their lives in a world of commerce that emphasizes producing and selling goods and services. |
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The birth of the wireless Internet has spawned mobile commerce, or m-commerce. |
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The easy fusion of land, industry, and commerce was a well-established English tradition. |
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Look, you sell a whole commerce idea and then basically say it would be better to use your eyes. |
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At one time the Freemen of York exerted a commanding influence in commerce, government and the judicature of the city. |
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The walled cities of medieval Italy were fixed universes, bastions of defense, outlets for commerce, which had been built out of fear. |
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The Bathonian has joined his fourth golf club since leaving the world of commerce. |
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The terrorists used civilian aircraft as kamikazes to blast American centers of commerce and destroy global symbols of American power. |
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While still on the tree, the fruits burst open exposing the cotton like substance, which is the kapok of commerce. |
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In the realm of commerce, the state's policies were designed to secure a favorable balance of trade. |
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Two of these expressed powers, or enumerated powers, are the power to coin money and the power to regulate interstate commerce. |
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Few books of poetry have any significance in the larger consumerist culture of multinational commerce. |
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The company also said the money raised would be mainly used to fund companies specialising in electronic commerce, semiconductors and software. |
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From there stems new business, and with new businesses and new product comes trade and commerce. |
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If second-generation systems can meet these criteria, businesses will be eager to evolve commerce to e-commerce. |
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He received his degree in commerce, but an accident changed his entire future direction. |
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As tsar he wanted to apply western mercantilism to stimulate agriculture, industry and commerce. |
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The Letter of Law emphasized the importance of facilitating commerce and assisting merchants to develop their trading activities. |
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In the end, it will be commerce and the merchant class that will provide, and they will have to go it alone, without the help of superpowers. |
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Electronic commerce is leading the way to using disk-based mirrors for data replication and data distribution. |
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Raised on industry and empire, the capital invests in commerce and culture. |
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There is a need too for teachers of English and vocational skills like farming, commerce and bee-keeping. |
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More depressingly, the proper spirit of real commerce was now missing from the streets of lower Manhattan. |
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It has vast potential for commerce with boating, cycling, walkers and pleasure cruising. |
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Yet, business people who try to carry over what they have learnt in commerce to running an economy will often get it wrong. |
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The commerce department said business inventories were falling, spurring hopes that purchasing may soon pick up. |
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Britain in the eighteenth century developed a culture of credit and commerce, based on trust and reputation. |
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They are still grown around the Mediterranean, but have been partly ousted in commerce by the satsumas and clementines. |
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Mr Oakley thinks Yell's involvement is proof that commerce can play a key part. |
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With that in mind, Mr Prescott was putting flesh on the bones of devolution proposals for those in commerce, trade, manufacturing and business. |
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On the whole, people go on holiday to downshift, to go back a few centuries and to get away from commerce and industry. |
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Would it not have been better to allow internal reform, political evolution, and moral suasion combined with unfettered commerce to work change? |
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They were focused on harbors or riverfronts, since water transport fueled commerce. |
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Her films and writings establish an exchange between high and popular culture, art and commerce. |
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Other state-supported institutions provide advanced training in nursing, engineering, commerce, and seamanship. |
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As a consumer, it was your duty to have a million desires in order to fuel that commerce with your purchases. |
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Such commerce on the national scale was made possible by China's system of navigable waterways, partly natural and partly man-made. |
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I was privileged yesterday to be the guest of honour at the Victoria University graduation ceremony for commerce graduands. |
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For this former cabbie, commerce is simply a part, albeit a very large one, of being an artist. |
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And then there are the high rollers, representing chambers of commerce, big business, the healthcare, banking, and insurance industries. |
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Could the government of England destroy the commerce of all other nations, she would most effectually ruin her own. |
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Piracy has flourished on the high seas for as long as maritime commerce has existed between states. |
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The first step is that you need capital to start businesses and grease the wheels of commerce. |
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Growing overseas commerce with colonies stimulated merchants to provide ships, as well as goods for expanding settler societies. |
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One of the tenets in the chamber of commerce charter states that employees should be able to handle complaints. |
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It will be a shock leaving the cosy, fluffy world of working for a university to then leap into the hairy, scary world of Internet commerce. |
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City fathers have long known the advantages for commerce and tourism of being car friendly. |
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His trade was as a tanner, but he was also involved in wholesale commerce, and in 1356 was summoned to attend a national merchant assembly. |
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He comes from a high-class family of mandarin intellectuals who despised commerce and viewed making money as vulgar. |
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Chambers of commerce, business, school, and professional organisations are electing their leaders all over the country. |
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Its commerce, both overseas and coastwise, surpassed all other American ports. |
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Additional money would match an increase in commerce and the value of money would be held constant. |
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Zola's cheese shop was aptly set in the new market halls, built in the 1850s, for it depicted modern commerce and not immemorial rural custom. |
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To the south, Kiowas, Comanches, and Cheyennes threatened the commerce with Santa Fe and raided deep into Texas. |
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By the time the Normans conquered in 1066, York was bigger in terms of size, status and population thanks to the Viking flair for commerce. |
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But three years on, his much-touted finance and commerce ministers have been unable to spark zest into the moribund economy. |
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The king found that there would be no harm in having free circulation of money, and that this would in fact increase commerce and exchange. |
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Both are seeds, in the language of botany or natural history, but not in commerce nor in common parlance. |
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One of the primary causes of the great revival of European commerce in the twelfth century was the rise of Cistercian monasteries. |
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Those inclined towards commerce and trade perform Ayudha Pooja, to achieve success in business. |
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The dried fruit is also known as the black myrobalan of ancient commerce and at one time was exported to Europe for the production of ink. |
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I knew from the beginning that commerce and commercialism would come to the space, and I welcome it. |
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Its empire instead consisted in commerce, particularly through the control that Venetian coinage exerted over international trade. |
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To struggle with the digital divide, we must address access, content and commerce issues. |
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I know I knock it a lot, but the fact is, there's no other city in the world that compares in terms of culture, commerce, and energy. |
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The city is boisterous, its natives felicitously facetious, its commerce flourishing. |
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At the time, he was a commerce student at UCD and duly graduated with flying colours. |
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The spin-off for employers is that they will have an active role in bringing about a more capable workforce for the future success of commerce. |
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They quickly improved trade and commerce on the islands by building new hospitals and erecting strong fortifications. |
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The second part focuses on the ways that Native Americans and Europeans adjusted to this new commerce. |
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Indeed, landowners were expropriated almost immediately, while banks, commerce and industry were nationalized. |
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There is a common myth that America, land of the free market cowboys, is the unregulated Wild West of commerce. |
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In the world of commerce they are fierce competitors, especially in the world of media. |
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The number of potential consumers makes the idea of borderless commerce a tantalizing ideal. |
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Combining economics study with related areas in a business or commerce degree curriculum is also a good strategy. |
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Meanwhile burgeoning transoceanic commerce, resulting in regular and improved shipping, facilitated the migration process. |
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Miller was a persistent critic not of commerce, but of the commercial ethic as an all-embracing ideology. |
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The statute was enacted pursuant to Congress' power to regulate interstate commerce. |
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From now on, he said, bosses of commerce and industry will have a real say on issues like allocating land for business and housing development, road links and transportation. |
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The blue-water warships were generally unsuited for blockade duty, so the indirect approach represented by the privateers and commerce raiders failed to raise the blockade. |
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Thus, playing the Nubians allowed me to get access to commerce advances early, letting me build caravans and merchants to generate enough wealth for my endeavors. |
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Alone among American sports, arguably, baseball is both art and commerce, with a folkloric tradition approaching religion. |
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By the end of your DipHE you should have the knowledge and skills needed to pursue successfully a career in management within industry, commerce or the public sector. |
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That's free enterprise, not a violation of antitrust law, which is defined as a group monopolizing trade or commerce through unreasonable methods. |
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Eglantine is a wonderful rose that is rarely see these days in commerce. |
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And one of the county's commerce bosses claims one in five employers say a fifth of all current job vacancies cannot be filled because of skills shortages. |
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Electronic commerce, also called E-commerce, is revolutionizing how producers and agribusiness enterprises market their products and research new opportunities. |
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Traditional carpet weaving is a large component of Azerbaijani commerce. |
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There, blanco reportedly was trying to go clean, plowing her earnings into commerce, including a lingerie shop in Medellin. |
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Ninety four percent of all daily commerce takes place because diesel and turbine engines deliver the goods. |
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Comprehensive as is the commerce power in the Constitution, the taxing power is clearly distinct and is expressly limited by the qualifications and exceptions stated. |
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It is clear many Australians have concerns about electronic commerce, including issues such as legal certainty, security, authentication and privacy. |
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Homegrown medical marijuana qualifies as interstate commerce, the Supreme Court ruled June 6, in the second major setback it has delivered to pot patients. |
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I put up a link recently to one of his articles about how business, profit and commerce generally seem to be decried and scorned by the intelligentsia. |
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American privateering scourged British commerce during the Revolution, and some U.S. Navy skippers like John Paul Jones won famous single-ship victories. |
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It is not surprising to find that the three tide mills also had substantial quays or piers, enabling the millers to act as merchants for the commerce of the area. |
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Between 1965 and 1974 he worked in commerce, both as manager of IMPEX and as a representative for the business community at various nongovernmental organizations. |
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There wasn't a lot of social commerce going on between the two groups. |
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Signs show you dusting off shelved entrepreneurial projects or weaving more commerce into the fabric of your daily life. |
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Miller is at his best delineating the interplay of technology, commerce, and culture. |
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Chamber of commerce yearbooks and annual reports repeated such themes. |
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There are some exceptions in the financial services sector, where a degree in business, commerce or mathematics and a postgrad in IT can still secure an IT position. |
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A guide to national prosperity and safety more true and unerring cannot be found than a favorable balance of trade, sustained by such a regulation of commerce. |
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York is promoted as being a centre of commerce and business. |
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What was initially intended to be a celebration of music has degenerated into a weird marriage of fashion and commerce. |
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Occupations among the poorer classes involved mainly domestic work but also included street vending, or small retail commerce in foodstuffs, coal or fish. |
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They turned useless prairies into golden wheat fields, their wagons into powerful locomotives, and a savage wilderness into a network of commerce and trade. |
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Tied by geographic proximity, commerce, communities, and security, the Americas are indelibly linked. |
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Database triggers fired off subroutines sending demands through electronic commerce, known as EDI, instructing each customer to pay back their loans in full. |
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He soon buckled down to part-time study, gaining his bachelor of commerce degree at the University of Auckland as part of a standard accountancy career. |
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Well-guarded border crossings would allow international commerce to continue while also providing an opportunity to keep track of who is entering and exiting the country. |
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Roman numerals are fine for recording numbers, and for doing simple additions and subtractions, which meant they were adequate, if somewhat cumbersome, for commerce and trade. |
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Always with an eye for the main chance, especially in agricultural commerce, Haraszthy initiated the first steamboat service on the Wisconsin and upper Mississippi rivers. |
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He lauds the push for stricter regulations on interstate commerce and a range of effective compromises. |
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That is as true today as it was at the time of Black Death, when the links between disease and commerce first became apparent. |
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The second document is a press release from the Auckland chamber of commerce 2 days later, stating that Auckland's transport crisis needs actions, not bully-boy slogging. |
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For, as we have seen, the misfortunes of the city were due to the insalubrity of its climate and the collapse of the Portuguese power and commerce in the East. |
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But trying to impose such order by chasing away informal commerce and culture is myopic. |
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He refers to this picture as a shadowgraph rather than a mirage for there are elements of truth of the commerce and industry picture that partially explains its persistence. |
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Functionally, they brought together land, commerce, and industry. |
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Most of the wormseed of commerce comes from the steppes of the northern portion of Turkestan whence it finds its way to Moscow and Western Europe. |
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He ridicules new subjects such as commerce and business administration. |
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As secretary of commerce, Hoover himself drafted much of the legislation. |
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The Customs House and the blunt gullied bulk of the Grote Kirk, manifestations of commerce and Calvinism, dominated a town famous for its rigorous Dutch cleanliness. |
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The ongoing and increasing predominance of English in world culture and commerce will continue to provide many advantages to Britain in many arenas. |
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Second, commerce is impervious to modern political boundaries. |
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Congress ushered in a new era of federal regulation under the commerce power, beginning with the enactment of the Interstate Commerce Act in 1887. |
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For the purpose of vesting in the new commission power to regulate the various classes of these carriers, provisions now in the interstate commerce act have been incorporated in the Couzens bill. |
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It's also a fascinating story about how red-dirt artistry and two-bit commerce came together to create and market a product that transformed the music world. |
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Burning Man is a refreshing, artsy anomaly in America, a place where commerce and barter are not allowed, replaced instead with selfless giving on an enormous scale. |
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We'll look at the tough sell facing our commerce secretary in Beijing. |
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Once new trade routes were forged to the Americas, Africa and Asia, mercantilism involved statecraft and realpolitik as well as trade and commerce. |
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The court thus sidestepped the critical issue of whether the Constitution's commerce clause gave the federal government the authority to act as national arbiters of morality. |
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This was followed in 1876 by the Chefoo Convention which opened more ports, arranged for inland trade with British Burma and local taxes on commerce. |
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The statute is not limited to possession in or even affecting interstate commerce, or to possession of a firearm that has traveled in interstate commerce. |
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Because nearly every gun has traveled in or affected interstate commerce, the federal law of possessing guns in school zones is essentially the same today as it was pre-Lopez. |
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Unfortunately business and commerce is a lot more complex than that. |
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They argued that it was enough that the communications in that case travelled by means of an instrument of interstate commerce, such as the phone system. |
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The other numerous writers of most modern date, though generally strenuous advocates for the neutral rights of commerce, make no allusion to the British principle. |
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If the sit-down strike is held to violate legislation governing the free movement of interstate commerce, it would then be in violation of federal law as well as state. |
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A diplomate of the Copenhagen Business School, he recently retired from the insurance business, having been previously engaged in both wholesale and retail commerce. |
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Mr Monks added that by bringing new residents to the area, local commerce and businesses would benefit and it would help rejuvenate the town centre. |
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Britain was triumphant in science, commerce and military endeavours. |
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Lower denominations such as 1, 5, 10 bututs don't circulate because of the effects of inflation which have rendered the coins worthless in day-to-day commerce. |
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Moore said SE's planned Intermediary Technology Institutes could help solve the latter problem by providing a halfway house between academia and commerce. |
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Common Samoan is the Samoan language of commerce and normal village interactions, while Respect Samoan includes honorific terms used for others of equal or greater rank. |
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The U.S. economy, the mighty machine that powers global commerce, stalled out and seems to be headed in reverse. |
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It is typical of Marx's unrigorous mind that he should leave the answer ambiguous, as if commerce could exist independently of the people carrying it on. |
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No one seems to think that the power to regulate commerce with foreign nations vests a power in Congress to regulate the internal affairs of other nations. |
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Rockefeller heads the Senate commerce committee, which oversees the Federal Communications Commission. |
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Having thus established his high position and noble motive, Mun declares his rule of commerce, which may be taken as the central principle of English mercantilism. |
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The average return on capital invested in land was only about 5 per cent, or little more than half of the return available in commerce or in industry. |
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And the migration from magnetic stripe cards to smart cards within the financial sector is expected to provide greater opportunity to use these cards for mobile commerce. |
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Many of the modern roses in commerce today are grafted onto these stocks. |
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Following the collapse of the Roman Empire, all of Europe faltered as trade and commerce dried up. |
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Support for entrepreneurship has to be matched by a large public construction project that would facilitate commerce in general. |
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The conjunction of portrait miniature and jeweled container located the portrait ineradicably in the domain of luxury, and hence also of commerce. |
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The Court fashioned a no-commandeering rule that prevents Congress, when acting pursuant to the commerce power, from compelling the legislature to implement a federal mandate.
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As commerce expanded and as trade conditions allowed, the masters trained apprentices and hired journeymen, always within the rules of the guilds they had created. |
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Mercury is depicted as holding a purse,symbolic of his association with commerce, as well as the winged sandals, winged cap and staff taken over from the Greek Hermes. |
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Few women are in positions of real responsibility in Japanese commerce and only around five per cent of women are elected representatives in Japan's Parliament. |
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But once he took over the commerce ministry, it meant a lot of travel. |
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Instead of encaging animals for profit, commerce should be financially supporting breeding programmes of animals in the wild, many of which are becoming rapidly extinct. |
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The City of Leeds is Yorkshire's largest city and is the main centre of trade and commerce. |
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The Germans fished near Iceland's coast, and the Hanseatic League engaged in commerce with the Icelanders. |
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Many residents of the area have Newport as their centre of commerce and culture, using the road over the down to reach it. |
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Little trade or commerce is known to have passed through the interior in subsequent periods, the only major exception being the Nile Valley. |
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However, despite all efforts the two ports were unable to replace Alexandria and Constantinople as the primary centres of commerce in the region. |
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Ragusa was the door to the Balkans and the East, a place of commerce in metals, salt, spices and cinnabar. |
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Genoa replaced Venice in the monopoly of commerce with the Black Sea territories. |
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It dominated trade on the Mediterranean Sea, including commerce between Europe and North Africa, as well as Asia. |
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In 1581, England set up the Levant Company to monopolize commerce with the Ottoman Empire. |
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Major commerce during this era gave rise to favorable conditions for private southern Chinese manufacturers and merchants. |
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Communication between the Yuan dynasty in China and Ilkhanate in Persia further encouraged trade and commerce between east and west. |
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Spices such as cinnamon, cassia, cardamom, ginger, pepper, and turmeric were known and used in antiquity for commerce in the Eastern World. |
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Trading in incense materials comprised a major part of commerce along the Silk Road and other trade routes, one notably called the Incense Route. |
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The Eradis of Nediyirippu in Eranad wanted an outlet to the sea, to initiate trade and commerce with the distant lands. |
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Dynastic Egyptians before 2000 BC imported olive oil from Crete, Syria and Canaan and oil was an important item of commerce and wealth. |
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On the other hand, the increase in the availability of silver coin allowed for commerce to expand in numerous ways. |
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The Portuguese Empire was created through commerce bases in South America, Africa, India, and across southeast Asia. |
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During the 10th century and onwards, cities and towns gained more importance and power, as commerce reappeared and the population kept growing. |
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Most of the commerce of the time was the coastal commerce of the Mediterranean, so it was better if ships did not draw much water. |
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The real engine for the growth of Cuba's commerce in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century was the Haitian Revolution. |
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They were sometimes quite progressive and directed towards the modernization of government and commerce in the Philippines. |
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Men and women active in commerce in the Bristol area are eligible to receive an invitation for membership in the Society. |
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In 1845, Britain and France intervened against Rosas to restore commerce to normal levels in the region. |
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Their Spanish or Portuguese was a lingua franca that enabled Sephardim from different countries to engage in commerce and diplomacy. |
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Having failed to conquer Ormuz, they instead followed a strategy intended to close off commerce to and from the Indian Ocean. |
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In 1631 the Chinese restricted Portuguese commerce in China to the port of Macau. |
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Over the long run, ranching and commerce were the most important economic activities, with the settlement of Tehuantepec becoming the hub. |
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Binondo, the oldest and one of the largest Chinatowns in the world, was the center of commerce and business activities in the city. |
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For the rest of the colonial period, most of Tabasco would have no major events and no major commerce in comparison to the rest of the country. |
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For the rest of the war, ships remained in the Frontera area to block commerce between Tabasco and central Mexico. |
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Transportation and commerce are important factors in the state, mostly linked to importing and exporting through its four deepwater ports. |
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His third goal was to create an English settlement in the land called Guyana, and to try to reduce commerce between the natives and Spaniards. |
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They had a monopoly of the black pepper commerce in Portugal and some of them later moved to Antwerp in Belgium. |
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Merchants have existed as long as business, trade and commerce have been conducted. |
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Southern cities like Cadiz and Seville expanded rapidly from the commerce and shipbuilding spurred on by the demands of the American colonies. |
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Higher education, the legislature and judiciary, national commerce and so on may all be carried out predominantly in English. |
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The FTAAP would create a free trade zone that would considerably expand commerce and economic growth in the region. |
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It was an engineering marvel which opened up vast areas of New York to commerce and settlement. |
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There are colleges offering pharmacy, architecture and dentistry along with numerous private colleges offering law, arts, commerce and science. |
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Institutions that derive the portcullis from these arms include a school, chamber of commerce and a rugby club. |
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It has been mentioned that the mill may have ceased operation during the Embargo of 1807, when commerce in Salem and Beverly was paralyzed. |
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During the early days of the war, there was illicit commerce across the river. |
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However, a number of cities were military and political centres, rather than manufacturing or commerce centres. |
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Now that commerce is done electronically, tax stamps are no longer issued here. |
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The whole world's frame, which is contexted only by commerce and contracts. |
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Crucially, the English common law was sufficiently flexible to adapt its archaic contractual rules into new formats suited to modern commerce. |
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France promoted commerce and capitalism, paving the way for the ascent of the bourgeoisie and the rapid growth of manufacturing and mining. |
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The Bank's involvement here re-enforces its local commitment to local business and commerce. |
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Born in the north of England to a prosperous mercantile family, he resisted attempts to recruit him to commerce. |
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The Common was an arts and crafts community focused around a chapel, with an emphasis on manual labour in opposition to modern commerce. |
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It was not until the silting of the River Dee ended Chester's port activities that people and commerce began to flood in. |
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Inuit people living in the region hunt mainly for food and, to a lesser extent, commerce. |
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The language spoken in commerce is English, but there are several indigenous languages. |
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The profit of privateerings is some small compensation to the merchants of Bourdeaux for the deficiency in the regular profits of commerce. |
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A merchant historically was anyone who was involved in business as long as industry, commerce, and trade have existed. |
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Merchants have been known for as long as humans have engaged in trade and commerce. |
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During the European medieval period, a rapid expansion in trade and commerce, led to the rise of a wealthy and powerful merchant class. |
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The British East India Company and the Dutch East India Company inaugurated an expansive era of commerce and trade. |
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Many businesses are regulable because of the interstate commerce clause of the United States' Constitution. |
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On the high seas, the Americans could only pursue a strategy of commerce raiding, taking British merchantmen with their frigates and privateers. |
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Businesspeople from Central Asia, Ethiopia, Ruanda and Nigeria met with senators and congressmen on commerce. |
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Southwest Airlines Inc is being encouraged to drop its campaign to repeal the Wright amendment by six minor chambers of commerce. |
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The aim of the project was to redesign and redevelop the relocate to Coventry website so it reflects life and commerce within the city. |
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Meanwhile, the ATC issued a bailable arrest warrant for Pakistan's former commerce minister Makhdoom Amin Fahim until July 10, the report said. |
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The DCCD is a default rule, defeasible by congressional exercise of its affirmative power over interstate commerce. |
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For two centuries Asians have been bystanders in world history, reacting defenselessly to the surges of Western commerce, thought, and power. |
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Online Business Index is the first time eBay has asked small businesses about the impact of mobile commerce to their online business strategy. |
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Our performance displayed in recent times as the DEIK and MTSO has contributed immensely to the commerce of the province, region and Turkey. |
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Although TQM has been widely studied, most studies occurred before the widespread development of electronic commerce. |
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The City of Nashua and its chamber of commerce are the southern anchor of the three cities involved in this Expo. |
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