Territory vs Copromote - What's the difference?
territory | copromote |
A large extent or tract of land; a region; a country; a district.
(Canada) One of three of Canada's federated entities, located in the country's Arctic, with fewer powers than a province and created by Act of Parliament rather than by the Constitution: Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut.
A geographic area under control of a single governing entity such as state or municipality; an area whose borders are determined by the scope of political power rather than solely by natural features such as rivers and ridges.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-08-03, volume=408, issue=8847, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= (zoology) An area that an animal of a particular species consistently defends against its conspecifics.
* {{quote-news, year=2011, date=October 1, author=Tom Fordyce, work=BBC Sport
, title=
* 12 July 2012 , Sam Adams, AV Club Ice Age: Continental Drift
To promote (a pharmaceutical product) under the same name and in the same territory by more than one company in order to maximize market share.
As a noun territory
is a large extent or tract of land; a region; a country; a district.As a verb copromote is
to promote (a pharmaceutical product) under the same name and in the same territory by more than one company in order to maximize market share.territory
English
Noun
(territories)Boundary problems, passage=Economics is a messy discipline: too fluid to be a science, too rigorous to be an art. Perhaps it is fitting that economists’ most-used metric, gross domestic product (GDP), is a tangle too. GDP measures the total value of output in an economic territory . Its apparent simplicity explains why it is scrutinised down to tenths of a percentage point every month.}}
Rugby World Cup 2011: England 16-12 Scotland, passage=Scotland had the territory and the momentum, forcing England into almost twice as many tackles and rattling them repeatedly at set-pieces.}}
- The matter of whether the world needs a fourth Ice Age movie pales beside the question of why there were three before it, but Continental Drift feels less like an extension of a theatrical franchise than an episode of a middling TV cartoon, lolling around on territory that’s already been settled.