merchandising

[ UK /mˈɜːt‍ʃɐndˌa‍ɪzɪŋ/ ]
[ US /ˈmɝtʃənˌdaɪzɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the exchange of goods for an agreed sum of money
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How To Use merchandising In A Sentence

  • With great power comes great merchandising opportunities. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hey! in in job merchandising orlando realizzare preload javascript costa serina foto Bruce in night spirit springsteen las limousine service sex vegas prive lecco willy wonka and bottle cap MULTISALA CINEMA ROMA VICENZA basic microsoft programming video visual concetto qualita genere Reid To Bush: If You Come After Us, We'll Hit Back Every Bit As Aggressively
  • This Pavlovian addiction gets magnified when the merchandising of the cartoon characters starts entering into every nook and corner of the house, be it the lunch box, the school note book or the bathroom towel.
  • For Disney, "Dinosaures" offers untold millions in merchandising opportunities, though its hard to imagine a smoking, cussing megalosaurus adorning lunch boxes or escorting Snow White in the Rose Bowl Parade. A Megalosaurus Hit?
  • The Presbyterian merchant sought to follow ethical principles in all his business affairs and to make merchandising a public service.
  • We now have a VP of merchandising for each department, like lumber and building materials.
  • I don't think that the Inland Revenue would be overly troubled by the meagre income generated by my merchandising boutique.
  • But in the meantime, we'll be looking towards licensing, merchandising, sponsorship, product placement, and other applications to bring us revenues offline.
  • FMI's updated mobility solution can be used to manage promotions, merchandising, retail management, recruitment and training.
  • This second column on “Tycoons, New England, and Kings,” covers the royal descents, and much New England ancestry, for 10 families long associated with American industry, finance, merchandising, railroads, and media, for whom such lines were first brought into the family not by the fortune-finder himself, but by his wife, daughter-in-law, granddaughter-in-law, or the wife of a later agnate descendant.
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