mercery การใช้
- Cloth was already being imported to England before the invasion through the mercery trade.
- In March 1527 he was granted'exclusive licence to import silks, jewels, and mercery wares for court revels '.
- In 1903, an established silk mercery business at Brunswick House, 3 Promenade Villas, London, was purchased on favourable terms.
- Half-timbered buildings of the 15th and 16th centuries list delightfully against one another along Mercery Lane and St . Margaret's Street, their plaster gleaming in the sun.
- At the conclusion of the 1939 season, in which he played in the second of Claremont's three consecutive premierships, Clarke purchased a mercery business in War Memorial in Lae.
- In the late 12th and early 13th century, the parish became one of the first centres in the City for the trade of mercery : trading in cloth, typically silk and other fine cloth that was not produced locally.
- In its heyday, the Ball & Welch department store was Melbourne's leading family draper, its A to Z departments including gloves, umbrellas and handkerchiefs, mantles, furniture, mercery, millinery, furs and corsets.
- His widow inherited a mansion in Catte Street in London and several manors and annuities, as well as the residue of Bradbury's estate, including his mercery business, which she appears to have sold, although not until after her son James Bodley, a mercer, had died in 1514.
- He advertised his " new and elegant Assortment of Goods . . . at unusual Low Prices " in the " Brighton Herald " and the " Sussex Daily Advertiser ", two prominent local newspapers, and described the range of services as " linen drapery, mercery, haberdashery and hosiery ".
- Funds came both from the original mercer trade and the collection of excise funds Thomas had been appointed a sub-commissioner of excise in 1674 . " In developing his banking business on the twin foundations of mercery and revenue remittance, he was anticipating by the better part of a century the technique employed by the founders of a number of the more successful eighteenth-century country banks ."
- I think that " The Mercery of London " is possibly straying from the article but is interesting all the same . " Oxford " I hoped would reveal why Magpie Lane was so named, but to no avail . " London Laid Bare " is incorrect to assume that Grub Street was once a Gropecunt . " Povery and Prostitution "-I've added that to my library, thanks : ) talk ) 22 : 21, 16 April 2009 ( UTC)