Yes - Marseilles is the second largest city in France behind Paris. It is the busiest commercial sea port in France.
It had a busy seaport NEW RESPONDENT To prevent blockade runners to call it.
New York City
Gioia Tauro is an example of an Italian seaport whose spelling begins with the letter "G".Specifically, the port is located in the "southwestern toe" part of Italy's boot. It makes up part of the busy maritime corridor between Suez on the southeastern Mediterranean and Gibraltar on the northwestern Mediterranean. The pronunciation of the name will be "DJO-ya TOW*-ro" in Italian.*The sound is similar to that in the English exclamation "Ow!"
There are many places called Portsmouth. One such place is on the south coast of England and it is a busy port. Many places in the USA were named after it including Portsmouth on the coast of New Hampshire very near the state lines of both Massachusetts and Maine.
The United States was organizing the government, expanding from the east coast to west the coast, building infrastructure, becoming a world economy, discovering a place in world affairs, and fighting a civil war and then recovering from that war.
ocupado = busy, occupied bullicioso = busy-busy
Bill visby
You are busy.You are busy.You are busy.You are busy.You are busy.You are busy.
Busy can't be a noun, which is a thing. Busy is an adjective, which describes things. "A busy street".
Busy, busy, busy and very crowded.
As busy as a bee.
No, I think 'busy' might be an adjective.Example:1) I'm too busy today. I think in this case 'busy' is describing 'I'.2) The market is always busy on Tuesdays for some reason.Here, 'busy' describes 'market'.