dry goods - definizione. Che cos'è dry goods
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Cosa (chi) è dry goods - definizione

TERM REFERRING TO SUPPLIES AND MANUFACTURED GOODS
Dry good; Dry-goods
  • Western-style false front]] in [[Burnaby Village Museum]], [[British Columbia]], [[Canada]]
  • Dry goods store in Macon, Georgia, U.S. c. 1877
  • Dry Goods store, Harper's Ferry

dry goods         
¦ plural noun
1. solid commodities traded in bulk, e.g. tea or sugar.
2. N. Amer. drapery and haberdashery.
Dry goods         
·- A commercial name for textile fabrics, cottons, woolens, linen, silks, laces, ·etc., - in distinction from groceries.
dry goods         
Dry goods are cloth, thread, and other things that are sold at a draper's shop. (AM; in BRIT, use drapery
, haberdashery
)
N-PLURAL

Wikipedia

Dry goods

Dry goods is a historic term describing the type of product line a store carries, which differs by region. The term comes from the textile trade, and the shops appear to have spread with the mercantile trade across the British Empire (and former British territories) as a means of bringing supplies and manufactured goods to far-flung settlements and homesteads. Starting in the mid-18th century, these stores began by selling supplies and textile goods to remote communities, and many customized the products they carried to the area's needs. This continued to be the trend well into the early 20th century. With the rise of department stores and catalog sales, the decline of dry goods stores began, and the term has largely fallen out of use. Some dry goods stores became department stores especially around the turn of the 20th century.

The term goes back to the 17th century and originally referred to any goods measured in dry measure, not liquid measure, of volume, such as stere, bushel or peck. Dry goods as a term for textiles dates back to 1742 in England or even a century earlier.

Esempi dal corpus di testo per dry goods
1. The rest is oxygen, drinking water and dry goods.
2. She sells dry goods, which have seen the biggest price increases here in recent months.
3. Whenever the bishop visits, he said, the church donates dry goods to the ethnic Germans living in Abkhazia.
4. You can buy organic cakes and biscuits from all the big supermarkets which usually have an ‘organic‘ dry goods aisle.
5. She worked in a dry goods shop which typically sells foods like nuts and seeds, but not poultry.