purvey - tradução para Inglês
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purvey - tradução para Inglês

ANCIENT RIGHT OF ENGLISH MONARCHS TO REQUISITION GOODS
Purveys; Purveyances; Purvey; Prise

purvey         
(v.) = suministrar, abastecer, proveer
Ex: In the sixteenth century the English book trade was centred in London, and consisted chiefly of retail stationers who would be likely to purvey both new and second-hand books and a variety of other goods.
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* purvey + information = suministrar información
purvey         
suministrar
proveedor         
TIPO DE COMERCIANTE
Tipos de proveedores; Proveedores
purveying

Definição

Purvey
·vi To Pander;
- with to.
II. Purvey ·vt To Procure; to Get.
III. Purvey ·vt To furnish or provide, as with a convenience, provisions, or the like.
IV. Purvey ·vi To purchase provisions; to Provide; to make provision.

Wikipédia

Purveyance

Purveyance was an ancient prerogative right of the English Crown to purchase provisions and other necessaries for the royal household, at an appraised price, and to requisition horses and vehicles for royal use. It was finally abolished in 1660.

Exemplos do corpo de texto para purvey
1. You have to take your hat off to the companies who purvey labour–saving – even labour–free – food to caterers.
2. Equally disturbingly, Saudi Arabia has used its vast oil wealth to purvey on a global scale the austere Wahhabist strain of Islam on which the Saud dynasty‘s legitimacy rests, but which poisons young minds and fuels murderous anti–Jewish and anti–western resentment.
3. Martin Luther King once put it, is "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today." I will not prophesy that the evil, dangerous persons (including fundamentalist Christians and secular Jewish neocons) responsible for the war on Iraq will purvey a Good Friday assault on Iran.
4. Sir Christopher, whose book, DC Confidential, was described by Mr Wright as a "disreputable enterprise," was personally accused of telling lies by one MP and put under pressure by the committee to resign as chairman of the independent Press Complaints Commission (PCC). Article continues Mr Price, whose book, The Spin Doctor‘s Diary, was said to purvey "gossip and tittle–tattle" and was originally branded "completely unacceptable" by Lord Turnbull, the former cabinet secretary, was accused of publishing for financial gain.