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postal system

   Also found in: Legal, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

postal system

System that allows persons to send letters, parcels, or packages to addressees in the same country or abroad. Postal systems are usually government-run and paid for by a combination of user charges and government subsidies. There are early references to postal services in Egypt c. 2000 BC and in Zhou-dynasty China c. 1000 BC. The Roman Empire developed various centralized methods of relaying messages. In the Middle Ages there were no centralized postal services. Private postal systems developed with the rise of nation-states during the Renaissance; subsequently, postal services became government monopolies. Charges based on weight rather than distance and the use of prepaid stamps were first proposed in 1837. The General Postal Union (1875; later Universal Postal Union) improved international mail delivery by allowing member countries to retain the postage they collected on outgoing international mail and requiring them to treat incoming international mail as they did domestic mail. Airmail and automated mail handling were developed in the 20th century. See also e-mail.


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As boring as life gets, I always look forward to a Friday night skate sesh with my friends, and getting my new Thrasher when the postal system decides to deliver it me.
As postmaster, he improved the postal system for the city and, later, throughout the Colonies.
The Mexican postal system handles 700 million letters a year, which sounds like a lot but adds up to just seven pieces per inhabitant.
 
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