corporate officer — ➔ officer * * * corporate officer UK US noun [C] US ► MANAGEMENT COMPANY OFFICER(Cf. ↑company officer): »At that time, research showed that only 25 companies had women filling one quarter of the corporate officer positions available … Financial and business terms
Corporate Officer of the House of Commons v Information Commissioner — was the legal case which resulted from the attempt to prevent the disclosure of the expense claims of Members of Parliament of the United Kingdom under the Freedom of Information Act. The House of Commons lost the case.[1] See also United Kingdom … Wikipedia
corporate — cor·po·rate 1 / kȯr pə rət/ adj: of or relating to a business corporation corporate 2 n: a bond issued by a business corporation Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
officer — of‧fi‧cer [ˈɒfsə ǁ ˈɒːfsər, ˈɑː ] noun [countable] HUMAN RESOURCES someone who has an important position in an organization. Officer is often used in job titles: • a local government officer • a personnel officer caˈreers ˌofficer HUMAN… … Financial and business terms
de facto corporate officer — An officer of a corporation in possession of, and exercising the powers of, the office under the claim and color of an election or appointment, although he is not an officer de jure and may be removed by proper proceedings. 19 Am J2d Corp § 1100 … Ballentine's law dictionary
Corporate title — Publicly and privately held for profit corporations confer corporate titles or business titles on company officials as a means of identifying their function in the organization. In addition, many non profit organizations, educational institutions … Wikipedia
Officer — Contents 1 Military 2 Shipping industry 3 Law enforcement 4 … Wikipedia
Corporate censorship — Part of a series on Censorship By media … Wikipedia
officer — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. policeman; functionary, official, bureaucrat; president, vice president, secretary, treasurer; registrar; mayor, governor. See director, authority. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [An executive] Syn. manager,… … English dictionary for students
officer — I slight; pique, Inf. miff, disgruntle, Inf. put [s.o.] off, displease; vex, annoy, provoke, incense, exasperate, distress; fret, irk, rankle, roil, Chiefly U.S. rile, rattle, ruffle; irritate, aggravate, nettle, chafe, gall, disturb. 2. disgust … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
officer de facto — See de facto corporate officer; de facto public officer … Ballentine's law dictionary