take out in trade

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English

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Verb

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take out in trade (third-person singular simple present takes out in trade, present participle taking out in trade, simple past took out in trade, past participle taken out in trade)

  1. (transitive, idiomatic) To accept repayment of a debt in the goods or services in which the debtor deals, rather than in money.
    • 1986, Deborah Fink, Open Country, Iowa: Rural Women, Tradition, and Change, page 59:
      Furthermore, rural grocers gave a slightly higher price for eggs if the money was taken out in trade.
    • 2002, Carolyn Eastwood, Near West Side Stories, page 129:
      I loved that because there were times when he'd send clothes over to my father's tailor shop to be done up, and he would pick up his things and not pay for them and he'd say, take it out in trade and we'd get our bread.

See also

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