I believe it is a large market. i.e. Super Market.
Supermarket Flea Market Farmer's market Meat market Stock Market
The word "market" can indeed be used as a verb, for example, "to market a product".
You can make a few sentences with the word market. You can use the sentences "I am going to the market" and "The market prices are going down".
The word 'market' is a noun, a word for a place where goods are offered for sale, a public gathering held for buying and selling merchandise; a word for a place, a word for a thing.The noun forms of the verb to market are marketer and the gerund, marketing.
According to the Related Link, it is from Persian, then Italian: ; bazaar : 1588, from It. bazarra, from Pers. bazar (Pahlavi vacar) "a market."
These are called "bazaars". The word is Persian.
As a given name or as a surname, I find no listing. However- the English word "bazaar" derives from a Persian word meaning "market", and from the Middle Persian word meaning "place of prices". Wikipedia link listed below-
The English word bazaar came to us in the 1580s from the Italian bazarra, which came from the Persian bazar (Pahlavi vacar), meaning "a market".
Yes, the word Persian is a proper noun, a word for the language or a person of Persia. The word Persian is also a proper adjective to describe a noun as of Persia (Persian carpet, Persian history).
The Persian word for thank you is "ممنون" (pronounced mamnoon).
The word "chess " derives from the Persian word shah, or king.
The language used in Ketelby's In a Persian Market is mainly instrumental. While there are no lyrics or vocal parts, the music incorporates elements of Persian and Middle Eastern music to create a lively and exotic atmosphere.
Persian can be a noun, and it can be an adjective.
its not Persian, its Armenian for "little"
The Persian word for "thieves" is "darakhtzadeh" (دزد).
The word scarlet is Persian