PUBLICLY TRADED

Any securities and shares that are bought and sold on an organised exchange. They are bought off a document that is called a prospectus.

twittermail
Categories: P

PUBLICS

Groups of people that are assocoiated with another group or company. The association may indirect or direct and includes groups such as students, customers, suppliers, employees and investors.

twittermail
Categories: P

PUBLICUM JUS

Lat. In the civil law. Public law; that law which regards the state of the commonwealth. Inst. 1, 1, 4.

twittermail
Categories: P

PUBLISH

A way to communicate a document or information by way of media such as print, radio and television. A book or document that can be published for the benefit of readers or listeners.

twittermail
Categories: P

PUBLISHED RATE

Known as Average Published Rate (APR). This si the rate that a company charges for a service such as freight. These charges are public knowledge and cannot be disputed. It also applies to services for utilitites such as gas, electricity and water.

twittermail
Categories: P

PUBLISHER

One whose business is the manufacture, promulgation, and sale of books, pamphlets, magazines, newspapers, or other literary productions.

twittermail
Categories: P

PUBLISHING

Commuinicating a document or a message by way of media such as print, radio and television. A document that goes through the publishing process that means it can be seen or read by any one person.

twittermail
Categories: P

PUDICITY

Chastity; purity; continence.

twittermail
Categories: P

PUDZELD

In old English law. Supposed to be a corruption of the Saxon “tcud- geld,” (woodgeld,) a freedom from payment of money for taking wood in any forest. Co. Litt. 233o.

twittermail
Categories: P

PUEBLO

In Spanish law. People; all the inhabitants of any country or place, without distinction. A town, township, or municipality. White, New Itecop. b. 2, tit. 1, c. 6, I 4. This term “pueblo,” in its original signification, means “people” or “population,” but is used in the sense of the English word “town.” It has the indefiniteness of that term, and, like it, is sometimes applied to a mere collection of individuals residing at a particular place, a settlement or village, as well as to a regularly organized municipality. Trenouth v. San Francisco, 100 U. S. 251, 25 L. Ed. 626.

twittermail
Categories: P