A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia
A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia

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New English :: hostile
hosting.html - adjective (Business World) Of a take-over bid or proposed merger: against the wishes of the target company's management; predatory, contested. Etymology: A specialized sense of hostile in its figurative use, with an admixture of the literal meaning 'involving hostilities'. History and Usage: The term arose in the financial markets of the US in the mid seventies. It was the sharp increase in hostile bids in the first half of the eighties that led to the growth of devices such as the buyout, the Pac-Man defence (see Pac-ManÜ), and the poison pill. Greycoat Group...is making a hostile
    108 million offer for Property Holding and Investment Trust. The Times 26 Aug. 1986, p.
    15 Mr. Segal insists that hostile takeovers, leveraged buyouts and forced restructurings--which he bundles together under the...label 'corporate makeovers'--are 'symptoms, not the disease'. New York Times Book Review 29 Oct. 1989, p. 32
Traditional English :: hostile
hosting.html - adj.
1 of an enemy.
2 (often foll. by to) unfriendly, opposed.
    hostile witness Law a witness who appears hostile to the party calling him or her and therefore untrustworthy.
    hostilely adv. [F hostile or L hostilis (as HOST(1))]
Traditional English :: hostility
hosting.html - n.
(pl. -ies)
1 being hostile, enmity.
2 a state of warfare.
3 (in pl.) acts of warfare.
4 opposition (in thought etc.). [F hostilit
    or LL hostilitas (as HOSTILE)]
New English :: host surrogacy
hosting.html - (Health and Fitness) (People and Society) see surrogacy
New English :: hostile
hosting.html - adjective (Business World) Of a take-over bid or proposed merger: against the wishes of the target company's management; predatory, contested. Etymology: A specialized sense of hostile in its figurative use, with an admixture of the literal meaning 'involving hostilities'. History and Usage: The term arose in the financial markets of the US in the mid seventies. It was the sharp increase in hostile bids in the first half of the eighties that led to the growth of devices such as the buyout, the Pac-Man defence (see Pac-ManÜ), and the poison pill. Greycoat Group...is making a hostile
    108 million offer for Property Holding and Investment Trust. The Times 26 Aug. 1986, p.
    15 Mr. Segal insists that hostile takeovers, leveraged buyouts and forced restructurings--which he bundles together under the...label 'corporate makeovers'--are 'symptoms, not the disease'. New York Times Book Review 29 Oct. 1989, p. 32
Traditional English :: host(1)
hosting.html - n.
1 (usu. foll. by of) a large number of people or things.
2 archaic an army.
3 (in full heavenly host) Bibl. a the sun, moon, and stars. b the angels.
    host (or hosts) of heaven = sense 3 of n. is a host in himself can do as much as several ordinary people. Lord (or Lord God) of hosts God as Lord over earthly or heavenly armies. [ME f. OF f. L hostis stranger, enemy, in med.L 'army']
hosting.html -