Has any new reseach turned up lately on this? As far as I can find, the word "mercantile" was commonly used as a synonym for "commercial" in the period, but I've not found evidence that it was used as a generic synonym for "store," even though you hear it used that way in living history, as in, "I'm going to the mercantile to buy..." rather than "I'm going to the store to buy..."
Are there any examples of that usage in the period? As I recall, the OED shows it starting to be used as synonym for "store" in historical fiction written in the 1980s, which sounds like it may be a recent invention/reenactorism in an attempt to sound old-fashioned. And indeed, a search at google books for "to the mercantile" (to try to eliminate all the mercantile banks and mercantile interests) shows that it's easy to find examples in recent historical fiction of the "store" usage (for example, here here and here), but not so easy to find them in period fiction.
So... any period examples of "mercantile" used as a synonym for the word "store" in common conversation about shopping?
Hank Trent
hanktrent@gmail.com
Are there any examples of that usage in the period? As I recall, the OED shows it starting to be used as synonym for "store" in historical fiction written in the 1980s, which sounds like it may be a recent invention/reenactorism in an attempt to sound old-fashioned. And indeed, a search at google books for "to the mercantile" (to try to eliminate all the mercantile banks and mercantile interests) shows that it's easy to find examples in recent historical fiction of the "store" usage (for example, here here and here), but not so easy to find them in period fiction.
So... any period examples of "mercantile" used as a synonym for the word "store" in common conversation about shopping?
Hank Trent
hanktrent@gmail.com
Comment