|
Definition of Financial organisation
1. Noun. An institution (public or private) that collects funds (from the public or other institutions) and invests them in financial assets.
Generic synonyms: Establishment, Institution
Specialized synonyms: Giro, Clearing House, Lending Institution, Central Bank, Foundation, Acquirer, Nondepository Financial Institution, Bank, Banking Company, Banking Concern, Depository Financial Institution, Federal Home Loan Bank System, Trust Company, Trust Corporation
Lexicographical Neighbors of Financial Organisation
Literary usage of Financial organisation
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Local Government in England by Josef Redlich, Francis Wrigley Hirst (1903)
"CHAPTER IV THE FINANCE AND financial organisation OF COUNTY COUNCILS l THE
transference of county business from Quarter Sessions to representative bodies ..."
2. Proceedings of the Sixth Meeting of the Task Force on Shielding Aspects of by OECD Nuclear Energy Agency (2004)
"The establishment of a comprehensive rural financial organisation will, on the
one hand, ... The perfection of the system of financial organisation and the ..."
3. The Colonisation of Indo-China by Joseph Chailley-Bert (1894)
"CHAPTER XV financial organisation. The principles of financial organisation—India
and Great Britain; Tonking and France—The Comparative independence of ..."
4. 'What is Secondary Education?' and Other Short Essays, by Writers of by Robert Pickett Scott (1899)
"SECONDARY Education in this country wants, it seems, intellectual rather than
financial organisation ; a competent national council should be appointed to ..."
5. Monopoly and Competition: A Study in English Industrial Organisation by Hermann Levy (1911)
"... or by merely undertaking the purely financial organisation and management or
the placing of the goods on the market. This possibility of uniting in one ..."
6. The System of National Finance by Edward Hilton Young Kennett (1915)
"One circumstance only needs emphasis; that each has within it a special financial
organisation, more or less independent of its executive ..."