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Definition of Intercommunity
1. n. Intercommunication; community of possessions, religion, etc.
Definition of Intercommunity
1. Adjective. Between communities. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Intercommunity
1. [n -TIES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Intercommunity
Literary usage of Intercommunity
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Works of Jeremy Bentham by Jeremy Bentham, John Bowring (1843)
"Between the Judge of one Immediate Judicatory and that of another, intercommunity
of service as complete as the nature of the case admits, has place. ..."
2. The New England Gazetteer: Containing Descriptions of the States, Counties by John Hayward (1857)
"China, Great Britain, Russia, Austria, and France, with, probably, Japan [which
still refrains from intercommunity with the rest of mankind], ..."
3. International Trade and Exchange: A Study of the Mechanism and Advantages of by Harry Gunnison Brown (1914)
"... intercommunity TRADE, AND THE GAINS OF TRADE The Relation of Prices in One
Country to Prices in Another THROUGH the influence of trade, the price in any ..."
4. Principles of Commerce: A Study of the Mechanism, the Advantages, and the by Harry Gunnison Brown (1916)
"... intercommunity TRADE, AND THE GAINS OF TRADE §1 The Relation of Prices in One
Country to Prices in Another THROUGH the influence of trade, ..."
5. Banking Practice: A Textbook for Colleges and Schools of Business Administration by Loyd Helvetius Langston, Nathan Ruggles Whitney (1921)
"Domestic intercommunity Exchange—Transit.—A third form of exchange operations
appears when an individual draws his check on a bank in one city and sends it ..."
6. International Trade: A Study of the Economic Advantages of Commerce by Harry Gunnison Brown (1914)
"... intercommunity TRADE, AND THE GAINS OF TRADE The Relation of Prices in One
Country to Prices in Another THROUGH the influence of trade, the price in any ..."
7. Outlines of Congregationalism; with an historical sketch of its rise and by John Spencer Pearsall (1844)
"The constitution of the apostolical churches allowed of friendly intercommunity.
Their independency was not a frigid isolation. Union might obtain among ..."