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Dictionary
trade card
noun
An early business card first produced at the beginning of the seventeenth century.
Exact(19)
Trade card shows showcase retired baseball stars.
" 'Bubble Dancers' began from a picture on a Victorian trade card.
A trade card produced by Liebig's Extract of Meat Company, 1896.
Dean & Emersonn, W., & Simpson, R. L. Yellow advertising trade card.
**{:.mt-enclosure mt-enclosure-image}" 'Bubble Dancers' began from a picture on a Victorian trade card.
Our records indicate that you have [dollar amount] dollars of unused credit on a GameStop Trade Card or Gift Card.
Similar(41)
Waxman Collection of Victorian Trade Cards: Food and Domestic Life.
Broadsides, trade cards, pamphlets, brochures, photographs, and other items.
Trade Cards: An Illustrated History features highlights from the Waxman Collection of Food and Culinary Trade Cards a remarkable assemblage of advertising trade cards about food and related subjects ca. 1870-1900.
European merchants invented trade cards in the 17th century to act as miniature advertisements.
"Trade cards, not people".
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