From old practice of land claims, mineral rights, etc., where one placed a (wooden) stake to delineate the boundary of a claim of a property right.
The plural of history is histories. If you say, "That country has a lot of history behind it", note that you are using the singular a lot. One does not say "That country has many history", but "many histories".
History of Salvation (a term used by German theologians, especially Oscar Cullmann)
a monopoly {from history alive book}
The term from French (résumé) is resumé pronounced (REH-zoo-may), a document showing educational and employment history, and qualifications.
Chattel is another term for all personal, rather than real, property. in the history of the childhood many children do not have their own chattel because of low income or poor countries
A stakeholder (in Project Management terms) is anyone who's affected and who can affect, in one way or another, the project.
A stakeholder is a person who owns stock (a stake) in a corporation .
stakeholder customer
Stakeholder pensions were created in the United Kingdom in April of 2001, and were intended to encourage more long-term savings for retirement. Stakeholder pensions are required to provide an income in retirement using a minimum of 75% of the fund. Up to 25% of the fund may be taken as a tax free lump sum.
In the business world, the term "stakeholder" refers to the person, group of people, or organization that has money tied to or interest in a business.
A stakeholder - is a person who has invested money in something.
Connected Stakeholder are directly connected with business organisations.
components of the tourism stakeholder system
A stakeholder of a mutual fund is someone who has interest in it.
A stakeholder is any person who affects or is affected by the activities of an organisation. A claim is the outcome that the stakeholder seeks or the outcome which would benefit the stakeholder most or harm it least
A stakeholder that does not engage in direct economic exchange with a company, but is affected by or can affect its actions. (Also called a secondary stakeholder.) An example are NGO's.
A stakeholder that does not engage in direct economic exchange with a company, but is affected by or can affect its actions. (Also called a secondary stakeholder.) An example are NGO's.