sell
Purchase. Acquire. Procure. Monetarily obtain. Secure. Get. Attain.
The verb is spelled "sell" (vend, peddle).
attend befriend bend fend gend mend pretend rend send tend unfriend vend wend
No, this depends on the function of "or" in the word. In the words door and floor, for example, the "or" is part of the root of the word and doesn't have another function. In words like vendor and grantor, the "or" is a suffix added to the roots "vend" and "grant", and the "or", related to Latin and French, means "one that does a specified thing". So if you can separate the "or" from a root, it is possibe (but not always true) that the noun relates to a person.Examples of nouns for things that end in 'or':alligatoranchorarborbehaviorcalculatorcolorcondorerrorfavorflavorliquorrazor
trade, exchange, market, vend
Vend, hawk, or sale.
The root word for "vendors" is "vend," which comes from the Latin word "vendere," meaning "to sell."
Vend means sell.
That's probably "sell." Check the "i."
bend, pretend, vend, mend, send. for more try rhymer.com
bend fend lend mend pend rend send tend vend wend
sell
vent
ya mum
Purchase. Acquire. Procure. Monetarily obtain. Secure. Get. Attain.
The cast of Gavroche vend des parapluies - 1913 includes: Paul Bertho as Gavroche