i have no idea what they sold in roman
This would be someone who sells an item to a merchant so the merchant can sell it to you. We call them "wholesalers" and they don't sell to the general public. They only sell to people who own stores.
This would be someone who sells an item to a merchant so the merchant can sell it to you. We call them "wholesalers" and they don't sell to the general public. They only sell to people who own stores.
A merchant looks like a middle class person who trades with a robe.
merchant guild would buy merch and then sell while craft guilds would sell the stuff they made i think...
The opposite to affiliate is merchant. A merchant has a product that they want to sell and make money and an affiliate is someone who promotes the merchants products and earns a commission.
Someone who sell goods.
There is no law that regulates this. But this does not mean that the merchant has to sell them to someone. A merchant can choose to not sell something to anyone he chooses.
You tell a merchant that you want to buy items, right click on the item you want to sell, and click sell item.
Yes. Just find a Merchant in any town and talk to them. You can choose to buy or sell.
You could try to calm them using a calming illusion spell of appropriate strength and then quickly talk to the merchant and sell your items.
Under the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), a merchant is defined as someone who deals in goods of the kind or has knowledge or skill unique to the goods involved in the transaction. Therefore, a merchant is typically recognized as such only in relation to the specific type of goods they regularly sell. If a merchant sells a different type of good that they do not typically deal in, they may not be considered a merchant for that specific transaction.
The purpose of an online merchant account is to sell things online. Online merchants need a merchant account or internet merchant account in order to accept payments. Merchant accounts are supplied to online traders by banks and payment service providers like PayPal and, in the UK, Nochex.com.