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Wordswarms From Years PastAdjacent Wordspassive immunizationPassive iron passive matrix display passive mine Passive movement Passive obedience passive power Passive prayer passive resistance passive resister passive restraint passive smoking passive source passive transfer passive transport Passive verb passive voice passive-aggressive passive-matrix Passively Passiveness passivism passivist Passivity passkey Passless Passman passmark Full-text Search for "passive trust" 2272 |
passive trust definitions
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2005)n Webster's 1913 DictionaryTrust Trust, n. 1. An equitable right or interest in property distinct from the legal ownership thereof; a use (as it existed before the Statute of Uses); also, a property interest held by one person for the benefit of another. Trusts are active, or special, express, implied, constructive, etc. In a passive trust the trustee simply has title to the trust property, while its control and management are in the beneficiary. 2. A business organization or combination consisting of a number of firms or corporations operating, and often united, under an agreement creating a trust (in sense 1), esp. one formed mainly for the purpose of regulating the supply and price of commodities, etc.; often, opprobriously, a combination formed for the purpose of controlling or monopolizing a trade, industry, or business, by doing acts in restraint or trade; as, a sugar trust. A trust may take the form of a corporation or of a body of persons or corporations acting together by mutual arrangement, as under a contract or a so-called gentlemen's agreement. When it consists of corporations it may be effected by putting a majority of their stock either in the hands of a board of trustees (whence the name trust for the combination) or by transferring a majority to a holding company. The advantages of a trust are partly due to the economies made possible in carrying on a large business, as well as the doing away with competition. In the United States severe statutes against trusts have been passed by the Federal government and in many States, with elaborate statutory definitions. |