corporate+body

  • 21corporate purpose — In reference to municipal corporations, and especially to their powers of taxation, a corporate purpose is one which shall promote the general prosperity and the welfare of the municipality; or a purpose necessary or proper to carry into effect… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 22corporate — Belonging to a corporation; as a corporate name. Incorporated; as a corporate body …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 23corporate purpose — In reference to municipal corporations, and especially to their powers of taxation, a corporate purpose is one which shall promote the general prosperity and the welfare of the municipality; or a purpose necessary or proper to carry into effect… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 24corporate colony — noun : a charter colony (as Connecticut or Rhode Island) having a royal charter granted to the inhabitants as a corporate body …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 25Corporate — Cor po*rate (k?r p? r?t), a. [L. corporatus, p. p. of corporare to shape into a body, fr. corpus body. See {Corpse}.] 1. Formed into a body by legal enactment; united in an association, and endowed by law with the rights and liabilities of an… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 26Corporate member — Corporate Cor po*rate (k?r p? r?t), a. [L. corporatus, p. p. of corporare to shape into a body, fr. corpus body. See {Corpse}.] 1. Formed into a body by legal enactment; united in an association, and endowed by law with the rights and liabilities …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 27Corporate universities — (CUs) are a growing trend in corporations. Corporate universities are anything from a pumped up training department to a degree granting branch of major companies. Denise Hearn, in her article Education in the Workplace: An Examination of… …

    Wikipedia

  • 28Corporate communication — is the message issued by a corporate organization, body, or institute to its publics. Publics can be both internal (employees, stakeholders, i.e. share and stock holders) and external (agencies, channel partners, media, government, industry… …

    Wikipedia

  • 29Corporate personhood — refers to the question about which subset of rights that are afforded under the law to natural persons should also be afforded to corporations as legal persons. In Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1819), corporations were recognized as having the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 30Corporate finance — Corporate finance …

    Wikipedia