marketer

See also: markéter and marketér

English

Etymology

market + -er

Noun

marketer (plural marketers)

  1. One who designs and executes marketing campaigns.
  2. One who sells goods at a market.
    • 2004, Mary Ellen Snodgrass, Encyclopedia of Kitchen History (page 79)
      Because marketers had to provide their own containers, the oval shopping basket was useful for holding odd-shaped staples.

Translations

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French

Etymology

From English market, from Old Northern French market (commerce; marketplace; trade) from Latin mercatus (market; trade; trading; buying and selling), from the past participle of mercari (to deal in; to buy; to trade), from merx (merchandise; wares), from the genitive mercis, from Proto-Italic *merk-, from Etruscan.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /maʁ.kə.te/

Verb

marketer (anglicism)

  1. (transitive) To market. « Mettre en marché » is preferred.

Conjugation

This verb is conjugated mostly like the regular -er verbs (parler and chanter and so on), but the -e- /ə/ of the second-to-last syllable becomes -è- /ɛ/ when the next vowel is a silent or schwa -e-. For example, in the third-person singular present indicative, we have il markète rather than *il markete. Other verbs conjugated this way include lever and mener. Related but distinct conjugations include those of appeler and préférer.

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