1) Absolutely, with some development, Microsoft CRM can be used as the database for your shopping website. You can use the built-in product catalog and price lists for your sales. Microsoft CRM has entities built into it for lead -> opportunity -> quote -> order -> invoice and you can repurpose any or all of these to work as you need them.
2) Typically the users of your shopping website will coincide with CRM contacts, which is great because you don't need user licenses for them. You will have to license each end user of the system but this is limited to employees of your business. In some scenarios you may need to purchase one external connector license which licenses you to expose data through a web site or other medium - see this blog for more details http://blogs.msdn.com/b/mscrmfreak/archive/2007/06/01/repeat-external-connector-license.aspx. You will need to develop the website shopping site front end and integrate it with Microsoft CRM using the Dynamics CRM SDK.
3) Building portals to Microsoft CRM is actually a very common request. A shopping website is a type of portal, another type would be a customer self service website. Both can utilize the Microsoft CRM database to get 60% of the way, and then integrate with the website.