Vendible
41vend´i|bly — vend|i|ble «VEHN duh buhl», adjective, noun. –adj. 1. salable; marketable: »Spoiled food is not vendible. 2. Figurative: »the vendible favors of some city officials. SYNONYM(S): corrupt, venal. –n. a salable thing. – …
42vend|i|ble — «VEHN duh buhl», adjective, noun. –adj. 1. salable; marketable: »Spoiled food is not vendible. 2. Figurative: »the vendible favors of some city officials. SYNONYM(S): corrupt, venal. –n. a salable thing. – …
43Venal — Ve nal, a. [L. venalis, from venus sale; akin to Gr. w^nos price, Skr. vasna: cf. F. v[ e]nal.] Capable of being bought or obtained for money or other valuable consideration; made matter of trade or barter; held for sale; salable; mercenary;… …
44Vendibility — Vend i*bil i*ty, n. The quality or state of being vendible, or salable. [1913 Webster] …
45vendable — adjective see vendible …
46vendibility — noun see vendible …
47William Adams (sailor) — For other uses, see William Adams (disambiguation). William Adams Born September 24, 1564(1564 09 24) Gillingham, Kent, England Died …
48Molly Maguires — For the movie, see The Molly Maguires (film). Location of the counties in northeastern Pennsylvania where the Molly Maguires were active The Molly Maguires were members of an Irish American secret society, whose members consisted mainly of coal… …
49Productive and unproductive labour — were concepts used in classical political economy mainly in the 18th and 19th century, which survive today to some extent in modern management discussions, economic sociology and Marxist or Marxian economic analysis. The concepts strongly… …
50Bookselling — Bookseller redirects here. For the British magazine, see The Bookseller. Bookmen redirects here. For other uses, see Bookman (disambiguation). Shakespeare and Company, an English language bookshop in Paris Bookselling is the commercial trading of …