The term agora may refer to: Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Wiktionary (a portmanteau of wiki and dictionary) is a multilingual, Web-based project to create a free content dictionary, available in over 150 languages. ...
Agora, an architectonic form typical of the ancient Greek markets
Agora (agorism), The term agora is also used by agorists to describe an open free market place where people buy and trade free from any government coercion.
The name Agora may refer to: Stoa of the ancient agora de Thessaloniki An agora (αγοÏά), translatable as marketplace, was a public space and an essential part of an ancient Greek polis or city-state. ... The agora (×××ר×, plural agorot) is a denomination of the currency of Israel. ... Agorism is a radical left-libertarian political philosophy popularized by Samuel Edward Konkin III, who defined an agorist as a conscious practitioner of counter-economics (peaceful black markets and grey markets). ... A free market is an idealized market, where all economic decisions and actions by individuals regarding transfer of money, goods, and services are voluntary, and are therefore devoid of coercion and theft (some definitions of coercion are inclusive of theft). Colloquially and loosely, a free market economy is an economy...
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The agora (×××ר×, plural agorot) is a denomination of the currency of Israel.
Agora is a reflective, prototype_based, object_oriented programming language that is based exclusively on message passing and not delegation.
Agora (in Greek AγoÏα) was an ancient town situated about the middle of the narrow neck of the Thracian Chersonese (called today Gallipoli penisula), and not far from Cardia, in what is now European Turkey.