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4 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
close corporation
/ˈklos-/
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Close
a.
[
Compar.
Closer
superl.
Closest
.]
1.
Shut
fast
;
closed
;
tight
;
as
,
a
close
box
.
From
a
close
bower
this
dainty
music
flowed
.
--
Dryden
.
2.
Narrow
;
confined
;
as
,
a
close
alley
;
close
quarters
.
“A
close
prison.”
3.
Oppressive
;
without
motion
or
ventilation
;
causing
a
feeling
of
lassitude
; --
said
of
the
air
,
weather
,
etc
.
If
the
rooms
be
low-roofed
,
or
full
of
windows
and
doors
,
the
one
maketh
the
air
close
, . . .
and
the
other
maketh
it
exceeding
unequal
.
--
Bacon
.
4.
Strictly
confined
;
carefully
quarded
;
as
,
a
close
prisoner
.
5.
Out
of
the
way
observation
;
secluded
;
secret
;
hidden
.
“He
yet
kept
himself
close
because
of
Saul.”
=\“Her
close
intent.”
\= --
Spenser
.
6.
Disposed
to
keep
secrets
;
secretive
;
reticent
.
“For
secrecy
,
no
lady
closer
.”
7.
Having
the
parts
near
each
other
;
dense
;
solid
;
compact
;
as
applied
to
bodies
;
viscous
;
tenacious
;
not
volatile
,
as
applied
to
liquids
.
The
golden
globe
being
put
into
a
press
, . . .
the
water
made
itself
way
through
the
pores
of
that
very
close
metal
.
--
Locke
.
8.
Concise
;
to
the
point
;
as
,
close
reasoning
.
“Where
the
original
is
close
no
version
can
reach
it
in
the
same
compass.”
9.
Adjoining
;
near
;
either
in
space
;
time
,
or
thought
; --
often
followed
by
to
.
Plant
the
spring
crocuses
close
to
a
wall
.
--
Mortimer
.
The
thought
of
the
Man
of
sorrows
seemed
a
very
close
thing
--
not
a
faint
hearsay
.
--
G
.
Eliot
.
10.
Short
;
as
,
to
cut
grass
or
hair
close
.
11.
Intimate
;
familiar
;
confidential
.
League
with
you
I
seek
And
mutual
amity
,
so
strait
,
so
close
,
That
I
with
you
must
dwell
,
or
you
with
me
. --
Milton
.
12.
Nearly
equal
;
almost
evenly
balanced
;
as
,
a
close
vote
.
“A
close
contest.”
13.
Difficult
to
obtain
;
as
,
money
is
close
.
14.
Parsimonious
;
stingy
.
“A
crusty
old
fellow
,
as
close
as
a
vise.”
15.
Adhering
strictly
to
a
standard
or
original
;
exact
;
strict
;
as
,
a
close
translation
.
16.
Accurate
;
careful
;
precise
;
also
,
attentive
;
undeviating
;
strict
;
not
wandering
;
as
,
a
close
observer
.
17.
Phon.
Uttered
with
a
relatively
contracted
opening
of
the
mouth
,
as
certain
sounds
of
e
and
o
in
French
,
Italian
,
and
German
; --
opposed
to
open
.
Close borough
.
See
under
Borough
.
Close breeding
.
See
under
Breeding
.
Close communion
,
communion
in
the
Lord's
supper
,
restricted
to
those
who
have
received
baptism
by
immersion
.
Close corporation
,
a
body
or
corporation
which
fills
its
own
vacancies
.
Close fertilization
.
Bot.
See
Fertilization
.
Close harmony
Mus.
,
compact
harmony
,
in
which
the
tones
composing
each
chord
are
not
widely
distributed
over
several
octaves
.
Close time
,
a
fixed
period
during
which
killing
game
or
catching
certain
fish
is
prohibited
by
law
.
Close vowel
Pron.
,
a
vowel
which
is
pronounced
with
a
diminished
aperture
of
the
lips
,
or
with
contraction
of
the
cavity
of
the
mouth
.
Close to the wind
Naut.
,
directed
as
nearly
to
the
point
from
which
the
wind
blows
as
it
is
possible
to
sail
;
closehauled
; --
said
of
a
vessel
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Cor·po·ra·tion
n.
A
body
politic
or
corporate
,
formed
and
authorized
by
law
to
act
as
a
single
person
,
and
endowed
by
law
with
the
capacity
of
succession
;
a
society
having
the
capacity
of
transacting
business
as
an
individual
.
Note:
☞
Corporations
are
aggregate
or
sole
.
Corporations aggregate
consist
of
two
or
more
persons
united
in
a
society
,
which
is
preserved
by
a
succession
of
members
,
either
forever
or
till
the
corporation
is
dissolved
by
the
power
that
formed
it
,
by
the
death
of
all
its
members
,
by
surrender
of
its
charter
or
franchises
,
or
by
forfeiture
.
Such
corporations
are
the
mayor
and
aldermen
of
cities
,
the
head
and
fellows
of
a
college
,
the
dean
and
chapter
of
a
cathedral
church
,
the
stockholders
of
a
bank
or
insurance
company
,
etc
.
A
corporation sole
consists
of
a
single
person
,
who
is
made
a
body
corporate
and
politic
,
in
order
to
give
him
some
legal
capacities
,
and
especially
that
of
succession
,
which
as
a
natural
person
he
can
not
have
.
Kings
,
bishops
,
deans
,
parsons
,
and
vicars
,
are
in
England
sole
corporations
.
A
fee
will
not
pass
to
a
corporation
sole
without
the
word
“successors”
in
the
grant
.
There
are
instances
in
the
United
States
of
a
minister
of
a
parish
seized
of
parsonage
lands
in
the
right
of
his
parish
,
being
a
corporation
sole
,
as
in
Massachusetts
.
Corporations
are
sometimes
classified
as
public
and
private
;
public
being
convertible
with
municipal
,
and
private corporations
being
all
corporations
not
municipal
.
Close corporation
.
See
under
Close
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
close
corporation
n
:
a
corporation
owned
by
a
few
people
;
shares
have
no
public
market
[
syn
:
closed corporation
,
private corporation
,
privately held corporation
]
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