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full-line

[fool-lahyn]

adjective

Commerce.
  1. of, supplying, or dealing in many related products and services, as opposed to a single or limited one.



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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

It plans to open eight "full-line" stores - which stock clothes, food and homeware - in cities such as Liverpool, Birmingham and Leeds in the next year.

Read more on BBC

Five of the eight new "full-line" stores will be situated on former Debenhams sites in the Leeds White Rose, Liverpool ONE, Birmingham Bullring, Manchester Trafford and Lakeside Thurrock shopping centres.

Read more on BBC

Last year, M&S announced plans to reduce the number of its "full-line" shops to 180 from 247 by 2028.

Read more on BBC

M&S, which last week reported better-than-expected Christmas trading, said its new store pipeline for 2023-24 includes eight full-line stores, including in Leeds, Liverpool, Birmingham and Manchester.

Read more on Reuters

The plan involves reducing the number of full-line M&S stores by 67, leaving 180 higher quality, higher productivity stores that sell the group's full clothing, home and food offering, while increasing its food only stores by 104 to 420.

Read more on Reuters

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