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Definitions

mercantilism

[mur-kuhn-ti-liz-uhm, -tee-, -tahy-] / ˈmɜr kən tɪˌlɪz əm, -ti-, -taɪ- /


Example Sentences

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As the U.S. economy shifted from colonial mercantilism to building its own markets, the want ads were dominated by land, shipping and artisan trades.

From The Wall Street Journal • Nov. 19, 2025

His was a prospect of a breezy, pragmatic mercantilism where nations did business deals to their mutual benefit, a world where profit can bring peace.

From BBC • May 16, 2025

“The advent of sailing ships led to mercantilism, and shaped capitalism.”

From Washington Times • Oct. 6, 2023

The eighteenth-century philosopher and economist Adam Smith, also a Scot, criticized mercantilism as well.

From Textbooks • Dec. 14, 2022

Even as the regulative spirit characteristic of the urban economy followed upon the freedom of the twelfth century, so mercantilism imposed itself upon commerce and industry in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

From The Stages in the Social History of Capitalism by Pirenne, Henri




Vocabulary lists containing mercantilism