He went to the nearest village and (
there) in the bazaar, he found various kinds of meat and fish.
Learn English – What does the word “there” refer to
word-usage
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Prepositions are often interchangeable in English, even when they seem to mean exactly the opposite thing in their literal sense. It is possible, for example, to say
You'll find a Chevron station down the road about five miles.
or
You'll find a Chevron station up the road about five miles.
or even
You'll find a Chevron station along the road about five miles.
and mean exactly the same place.
When someone tells you to go "down there for the International Terminal" they don't necessarily mean literally down as in on another vertical level unless the terminal happens to be on another vertical level. They could probably just as easily have said "up there for the International Terminal" — or even "over there for the International Terminal."
Prepositions may also be used as mild intensifiers. Instead of saying "Get out of here," someone might colloquially add emphasis with a few supererogatory prepositions: "Get on up out of here." Paradoxically, those same prepositions could be used to soften the statement as well. Much depends on context and tone.
When making paper, you have an oblong tray or bath of water over which is suspended a similar sized fine oblong-shaped sieve. The mashed matter (wood or fabric particles,leaves or flower pulp) is suspended in the water, and is captured on the surface of the sieve, forming a thin coating, an oblong sheet, which ultimately dries to form - paper.
In order to create a mark in the paper, wire, thick and thin, is used to form a flat design which is placed on the surface of the seive.
The wire is a kind of 'filigree' - the thicker wire supports the shape while finer interwoven wires build the design. This is why the name 'filigree' is used for the process in Italy, from c. 1282. You can see it in the video below.
The wire design causes the paper to form more thinly in that area, while following that design, creating a mark that can be seen when the paper is held up to the light, or specially wetted.
Calling such a mark a 'water mark' would be a fairly obvious thing to do, seeing that the paper is wet (as yet being not fully formed) and is actually suspended over a bath of water, at that time.
You could not make such a mark in the paper, had the paper already dried, or were it not then above 'water'.
I think 'water mark' reflects how the mark is made and is a simple description of the process.
This kind of water mark is not strictly 'impressed' into the paper as described in some online texts. Rather it is a kind of 'resist process' where the wire filigree causes the paper to be built - thinner - in certain places. It is thus not 'pressed in' or 'impressed'.
Described as 'impressed': http://www.dictionary.com/browse/watermark
You can see it being done here:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=QQwTblKyU8g
Two other kinds of watermark are impressed - and are not based on 'filigree' which was used earlier. These kinds are the dandy roll, which makes lines as in 'laid' paper. And the cylinder mould which makes shaded pictorial designs as used in banknotes and passports etc. This method is a form of impression, using something like a seal, rolled on, and dates from 1848.
Best Answer
It means: in, at, or to that place or position.
When "there" follows a location, it refers to that location. Example:
We went to London and stayed there ten days.
Your sentence can be written to:
He went to the nearest village and (in that village) in the bazaar, he found various kinds of meat and fish.