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Mercantile

Mercantile is an English adjective and noun relating to merchants or commerce. It describes activities, institutions, or people involved in trade, especially those connected with buying and selling goods. The word derives from Old French mercantile, via Latin mercantilis, formed from mercare "to trade".

In economic history, the term is closely associated with mercantilism, a policy framework dominant in Europe

As a noun, mercantile can refer to a merchant or trader, or to a mercantile establishment, such

In modern usage, mercantile is less common in everyday speech and more likely found in historical writing

roughly
from
the
16th
to
the
18th
century.
Mercantilist
doctrine
emphasized
surpluses
in
a
nation's
balance
of
trade,
the
accumulation
of
precious
metals,
and
strong
state
involvement
in
commerce—tariffs,
subsidies,
and
colonial
extraction—often
through
chartered
trading
companies.
as
a
general
store
that
sells
a
wide
range
of
goods.
Historically,
mercantile
houses
or
firms
operated
transnational
trading
networks
and
sometimes
functioned
as
agents
for
merchants
in
colonies.
or
specific
legal
contexts.
Some
jurisdictions
use
"mercantile
law"
or
refer
to
commercial
law
as
the
body
of
rules
governing
business
transactions.