Anonymous ID: 0bbd12 Oct. 20, 2020, 10:24 a.m. No.11172077   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2162 >>2613 >>2714

>>11171957

Ivanka Trump

@IvankaTrump

Today I joined @SecPompeo

and the President’s Interagency Task Force to Monitor & Combat Trafficking in Persons for our 3rd annual meeting.

 

⁦@realDonaldTrump

⁩ will not stop until we have routed out #ModernSlavery from every state, local, tribal, & territorial community.

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11:31 AM · Oct 19, 2020·Twitter for iPhone

https://twitter.com/IvankaTrump/status/1318213136273580032

Anonymous ID: 0bbd12 Oct. 20, 2020, 11:03 a.m. No.11172669   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>11172434

 

broker (n.)

 

mid-14c. (mid-13c. in surnames), "commercial agent, factor," also "an agent in sordid business," from Anglo-French brocour "small trader," from abrokur "retailer of wine, tapster;" perhaps from Portuguese alborcar "barter," but more likely from Old French brocheor, from brochier "to broach, tap, pierce (a keg)," from broche (Old North French broke, broque) "pointed tool" (see broach (n.)), with an original sense of "wine dealer," hence "retailer, middleman, agent." In Middle English, used contemptuously of peddlers and pimps, "one who buys and sells public office" (late 14c. in Anglo-French), "intermediary in love or marriage" (late 14c.).

 

broker (v.)

 

"to act as a broker," 1630s (implied in brokering), from broker (n.). Related: Brokered.

 

https://www.etymonline.com/word/broker

 

cooper |ˈkoopərˈkoopər|

noun

a maker or repairer of casks and barrels.

verb [with object]

make or repair (a cask or barrel).

ORIGIN

Middle English cowper, from Middle Dutch, Middle Low German kūper, from kūpe ‘tub, vat,’ based on Latin cupa. Compare with coop.