Usage Note: The term for a town or city that serves as a seat of government is spelled capital. The term for the building in which a legislative assembly meets is spelled capitol. cap·i·tal 2 (kăp′ĭ-tl) n. Architecture The top part of a pillar or column, typically having ...
First recorded in 1300–50;Middle Englishcapital(e)“head of a pillar,” fromAnglo-Frenchcapital, capitel,fromLate Latincapitellum“capital of a column,” equivalent tocapit-(stem ofcaput) “head” +-ellumdiminutive suffix Discover More
First Quarter Capital Management Pillar III Report of 2024.pdf Print This Page Share To Font: Small Medium Large Disclaimer Site map Useful links 简体/ 繁体 © China Construction Bank. All rights reserved. Beijing ICP License No.13030780 京公网安备:110102000450Address of headquarters:No.25, Fi...
Competitive capital: a fourth pillar of intellectual capital? In: Bontis, N. (Ed.), World Congress on Intellectual Capital Readings. Butterworth Heineman, Woburn.Rothberg, H.N, & Erickson, G.S. (2002). Competitive capital: a fourth pillar of intellectual capital?. dansBontis N. World ...
in architecture, the prominent crowning part of a vertical support (pillar or column). The capital transmits the weight from the architrave and superstructure to the support (or to an architectural element, such as a pilaster, that figuratively expresses this supportive function). Various types of...
in architecture, the prominent crowning part of a vertical support (pillar or column). The capital transmits the weight from the architrave and superstructure to the support (or to an architectural element, such as a pilaster, that figuratively expresses this supportive function). Various types of...
Pillar 3 Disclosure Report of Capital Management for the First Half of 2024:detail>> Main Features of Regulatory Capital Instruments and of External TLAC-eligible Non-capital Debt Instruments (20240630):detail>> Pillar 3 Information for the First Quarter of 2024:detail>> ...
Also see cattle, and compare sense development of fee, pecuniary. capital (n.2) "head of a column or pillar," late 13c., from Anglo-Frenchcapitel, Old Frenchchapitel, or directly from Latincapitellum"little head," diminutive ofcaput(see capitulum). ...
[Frank A. Fetter, "Reformulation of the Concepts of Capital and Income in Economics and Accounting," 1937, in "Capital, Interest, & Rent," 1977] Also see cattle, and compare sense development of fee, pecuniary. capital (n.2) "head of a column or pillar," late 13c., from Anglo-...
Also seecattle, and compare sense development offee, andpecuniary. Middle English hadchief money"principal fund" (mid-14c.). The noun use of the adjective in classical Latin meant "a capital crime." also from1610s capital(n.3) "head of a column or pillar," late 13c., from Anglo-Frenc...