Glossary entry (derived from question below)
Catalan term or phrase:
sindicacio
English translation:
syndication
Added to glossary by
Lavinia Pirlog
Apr 13, 2009 08:35
15 yrs ago
Catalan term
sindicacio
Catalan to English
Bus/Financial
Business/Commerce (general)
estatuts
La sindicacio per a la transmissio mortis causa de les accions classe B sera la mateixa que la prevista per a les accions classe A.
Proposed translations
(English)
3 | syndication | Sheila Hardie |
3 +1 | assignation | Etienne Muylle Wallace |
4 | syndication procedure | Peter Taylor |
Proposed translations
8 mins
Catalan term (edited):
sindicació
Selected
syndication
I think I'd say syndication in this case.
HTH
Sheila
sindicació
f.
1 Acció de sindicar o de sindicar-se.
f. 2 sindicació d’accions Limitació que hom fa del principi de la lliure transmissió d’accions.
A group of venture capitalists jointly investing in an investee company. Tag-Along Rights: If another shareholder sells his shareholding, the ...
hecpevc.wordpress.com/resources/pevc-glossary/
A loan syndication (or “syndicated bank facility”) is a large loan in which a group of banks work together to provide funds for a borrower. ...
www.fca.gov/info/glossary.html
The web site owner offers a service whereby headlines featured on the web site may be displayed on a web site using RSS Feeds under an implied license. This service is available at no cost for non-commercial use. ...
www.sagoodnews.co.za/terms_and_conditions/index.html
The sharing of deals between two or more investors, normally with one firm serving as the lead investor. ...
www.altassets.com/hm_glossary.php
financing by a group of lenders, usually financial institutions, combining to make up the total sum required for a project or bond issue.
194.242.113.59/index.php
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Note added at 12 minutes (2009-04-13 08:48:05 GMT)
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syn⋅di⋅cate [n. sin-di-kit; v. sin-di-keyt] Show IPA noun, verb, -cat⋅ed, -cat⋅ing.
–noun
1. a group of individuals or organizations combined or making a joint effort to undertake some specific duty or carry out specific transactions or negotiations: The local furniture store is individually owned, but is part of a buying syndicate.
2. a combination of bankers or capitalists formed for the purpose of carrying out some project requiring large resources of capital, as the underwriting of an issue of stock or bonds.
3. Journalism.
a. an agency that buys articles, stories, columns, photographs, comic strips, or other features and distributes them for simultaneous publication in a number of newspapers or periodicals in different localities. Compare boiler plate (def. 2a).
b. a business organization owning and operating a number of newspapers; newspaper chain.
4. a group, combination, or association of gangsters controlling organized crime or one type of crime, esp. in one region of the country.
5. a council or body of syndics.
6. a local organization of employers or employees in Italy during the Fascist regime.
–verb (used with object)
7. to combine into a syndicate.
8. to publish simultaneously, or supply for simultaneous publication, in a number of newspapers or other periodicals in different places: Her column is syndicated in 120 papers.
9. Television. to sell (a program, series, etc.) directly to independent stations.
***10. to sell shares in or offer participation in the financial sharing of (a risk venture, loan, or the like): to syndicate a racehorse among speculators; to syndicate a loan among several banks.***
–verb (used without object)
11. to combine to form a syndicate.
Origin:
1600–10; < MF syndicat office of syndic, board of syndics < ML syndicātus. See syndic, -ate 3
Related forms:
syn⋅di⋅cat⋅a⋅ble, adjective
syn⋅di⋅ca⋅tion, noun
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
HTH
Sheila
sindicació
f.
1 Acció de sindicar o de sindicar-se.
f. 2 sindicació d’accions Limitació que hom fa del principi de la lliure transmissió d’accions.
A group of venture capitalists jointly investing in an investee company. Tag-Along Rights: If another shareholder sells his shareholding, the ...
hecpevc.wordpress.com/resources/pevc-glossary/
A loan syndication (or “syndicated bank facility”) is a large loan in which a group of banks work together to provide funds for a borrower. ...
www.fca.gov/info/glossary.html
The web site owner offers a service whereby headlines featured on the web site may be displayed on a web site using RSS Feeds under an implied license. This service is available at no cost for non-commercial use. ...
www.sagoodnews.co.za/terms_and_conditions/index.html
The sharing of deals between two or more investors, normally with one firm serving as the lead investor. ...
www.altassets.com/hm_glossary.php
financing by a group of lenders, usually financial institutions, combining to make up the total sum required for a project or bond issue.
194.242.113.59/index.php
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 12 minutes (2009-04-13 08:48:05 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
syn⋅di⋅cate [n. sin-di-kit; v. sin-di-keyt] Show IPA noun, verb, -cat⋅ed, -cat⋅ing.
–noun
1. a group of individuals or organizations combined or making a joint effort to undertake some specific duty or carry out specific transactions or negotiations: The local furniture store is individually owned, but is part of a buying syndicate.
2. a combination of bankers or capitalists formed for the purpose of carrying out some project requiring large resources of capital, as the underwriting of an issue of stock or bonds.
3. Journalism.
a. an agency that buys articles, stories, columns, photographs, comic strips, or other features and distributes them for simultaneous publication in a number of newspapers or periodicals in different localities. Compare boiler plate (def. 2a).
b. a business organization owning and operating a number of newspapers; newspaper chain.
4. a group, combination, or association of gangsters controlling organized crime or one type of crime, esp. in one region of the country.
5. a council or body of syndics.
6. a local organization of employers or employees in Italy during the Fascist regime.
–verb (used with object)
7. to combine into a syndicate.
8. to publish simultaneously, or supply for simultaneous publication, in a number of newspapers or other periodicals in different places: Her column is syndicated in 120 papers.
9. Television. to sell (a program, series, etc.) directly to independent stations.
***10. to sell shares in or offer participation in the financial sharing of (a risk venture, loan, or the like): to syndicate a racehorse among speculators; to syndicate a loan among several banks.***
–verb (used without object)
11. to combine to form a syndicate.
Origin:
1600–10; < MF syndicat office of syndic, board of syndics < ML syndicātus. See syndic, -ate 3
Related forms:
syn⋅di⋅cat⋅a⋅ble, adjective
syn⋅di⋅ca⋅tion, noun
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
+1
8 mins
assignation
I do not think any of the ters unionization etc are meant here, as thi is not a matter of tade unions, therefore this proposal
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Natalia Pedrosa (X)
3 hrs
|
4 days
syndication procedure
I agree that it seems better to use the term "syndication" rather than "assignation"/"assignment" etc. because there seems to be the idea that the transfer of the shares will be dependent on respecting conditions applying to a group of "syndicated" shareholders. I give an example of "sindicación" used in Castilian in the case of another company.
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