In ancient times, the name of the store manager was also called the shopkeeper. A noun used to address a shopkeeper or manager. The common name of ancient shopkeepers. The person in charge of the counter, known as the "shopkeeper", is generally in charge of the till, mastering the key of the till and the power of income and expenditure, that is, the ancient lobby manager.
2. Business trip
Refers to businessmen doing business everywhere; Shang Hongyu's Yi Fu: "Business travel is not good, and it is not provincial." Preface to Zhou Li Kao Gong Ji: "The rarity of learning is different from the four directions, which is called business travel." Zheng Xuan's Note: "Business travel is also selling customers." In the Western Jin Dynasty, Chen Shou's "History of the Three Kingdoms, Sun Bulu, Seeking Inverse Biography": "(Sun) Jian recruited various business travelers and elite soldiers from Huai and Si, totaling thousands of people, and joined forces with (Zhu) You to forge ahead bravely." You and the thief were trapped and forced to go to Marlboro. "
3. businessmen
Businessman, the ancient name for a businessman, is interpreted as a businessman who sits on a table, walks like a businessman and sells goods like a businessman. These two words are used together to refer to people who do business. "Zhou Li Tianguan Taizai": "On the sixth day, merchants paid bribes in currency." ? Zheng Xuan? Note: "Doing business is called Jia." "Shang Jun Book Reclamation Order": "There are few merchants, so it doesn't cost you anything."
4. Urbanist
Businessmen in shops. Thirteen years of Zuo Zhao's official career: "Seeking the same evil is like the city." "New Tang Book Wang Jinchuan": "Sexual greed, relative Ni Kui, soliciting money and accepting bribes, if the market is good."
5. General quotient
Also known as the general manager. Among the exclusive businessmen in monopoly industries, the Qing government appointed a wealthy businessman as the leader. During the Jiaqing period, the general affairs and prime minister's foreign affairs were set up in the thirteenth line of Guangzhou. Before Daoguang, there was a general manager among salt merchants. Back to Chapters 3 and 5 of The Scholars: "I saw more than 20 sedan chairs resting on the shore, all of which were generals and merchants from Huai River and Huai River waiting for Zheng Jun."