Party Definition–noun | 1. | a social gathering, as of invited guests at a private home, for conversation, refreshments, entertainment, etc.: a cocktail party. |
| 2. | a group gathered for a special purpose or task: a fishing party; a search party. |
| 3. | a detachment, squad, or detail of troops assigned to perform some particular mission or service. |
| 4. | a group of persons with common purposes or opinions who support one side of a dispute, question, debate, etc. |
| 5. | a group of persons with common political opinions and purposes organized for gaining political influence and governmental control and for directing government policy: the Republican party; the Democratic party. |
| 6. | the system of taking sides on public or political questions or the like. |
| 7. | attac
3e8
hment or devotion to one side or faction; partisanship: to put considerations of party first. |
| 8. | Law. | a. | one of the litigants in a legal proceeding; a plaintiff or defendant in a suit. |
| b. | a signatory to a legal instrument. |
| c. | a person participating in or otherwise privy to a crime. |
|
| 9. | a person or group that participates in some action, affair, plan, etc.; participant: He was a party to
e53
the merger deal. |
| 10. | the person under consideration; a specific individual: Look at the party in the green velvet shorts. |
| 11. | a person or, usually, two or more persons together patronizing a restaurant, attending a social or cultural function, etc.: The headwaiter asked how many were in our party; a party of 12 French physicists touring the labs; a party of one at the small table. |
| 12. | a person participating in a telephone conversation: I have your party on the line. |
| 13. | any occasion or activity likened to a social party, as specified; session: The couple in the next apartment are having their usual dish-throwing party. |
| 14. | an advantageous or pleasurable situation or combination of circumstances of some duration and often of questionable character; period of content, license, exemption, etc.: The police broke in and suddenly the party was over for the nation's most notorious gunman. |
–adjective | 15. | of or pertaining to a party or faction; partisan: party leaders. |
| 16. | of or for a social gathering: her new party dress. |
| 17. | being shared by or pertaining to two or more persons or things. |
| 18. | Heraldry. (of an escutcheon) having the field divided into a number of parts, usually two; parted. |
–verb (used without object) Informal. | 19. | to go to or give parties, esp. a series of parties. |
| 20. | to enjoy oneself thoroughly and without restraint; indulge in pleasure. |
| From Dictionary
Supply Definition–verb (used with object) | 1. | to furnish or provide (a person, establishment, place, etc.) with what is lacking or requisite: to supply someone clothing; to supply a community with electricity. |
| 2. | to furnish or provide (something wanting or requisite): to supply electricity to a community. |
| 3. | to make up, compensate for, or satisfy (a deficiency, loss, need, etc.): The TVA supplied the need for cheap electricity. |
| 4. | to fill or occupy as a substitute, as a vacancy, a pulpit, etc.: During the summer local clergymen will supply the pulpit. |
–verb (used without object) | 5. | to fill the place of another, esp. the pulpit of a church, temporarily or as a substitute: Who will supply until the new minister arrives? |
–noun | 6. | the act of supplying, furnishing, providing, satisfying, etc.: to begin the supply of household help. |
| 7. | something that is supplied: The storm cut off our water supply. |
| 8. | a quantity of something on hand or available, as for use; a stock or store: Did you see our new supply of shirts? |
| 9. | Usually, supplies. a provision, stock, or store of food or other things necessary for maintenance: to lay in supplies for the winter. |
| 10. |
3e8
Economics. the quantity of a commodity that is in the market and available for purchase or that is available for purchase at a particular price. |
| 11. | supplies, Military. | a. | all items necessary for the equipment, maintenance, and operation of a military command, including food, clothing, arms, ammunition, fuel, materials, and machinery. |
| b. | procurement, distribution, maintenance, and salvage of supplies. |
|
| 12. | a person who fills a vaca
e53
ncy or takes the place of another, esp. temporarily. |
| From Dictionary
Related topics from BritannicaNational Party an Australian political party that for most of its history has held office as a result of its customary alliance with the Liberal Party of Australia (q.v.). It often acted as a margin in the balance ...
Green Party of Germany German environmentalist political party. It first won representation at the national level in 1983, and from 1998 to 2005 it formed a coalition government with the Social Democratic Party (SPD).Webb, Sidney and Beatrice When the Webbs, in late 1914, became members of the Labour Party, they rapidly rose high in its counsels. (Their leadership in the Fabian Society had been shaken by the opposition, first of H.G. ...
Malayan People's Anti-Japanese Army guerrilla movement formed originally to oppose the Japanese occupation of Malaya during World War II. In December 1941 a rapid Japanese invasion commenced, and within 10 weeks it had conquered ...
Philbrick, Herbert Arthur U.S. advertising salesman, writer, and spy (b. May 11, 1915?--d. Aug. 16, 1993, North Hampton, N.H.), infiltrated the Communist Party for the FBI while posing as a loyal member of the party and ...
Sweden From an economic point of view, however, the picture was quite different. The 1920s were marked by steadily improving trade conditions, and in this boom period Sweden was one of the countries that ...
Burke, Robert O'Hara explorer who led the first expedition known to cross Australia from south to north.economic planning A rearrangement of the planning system was the necessary consequence of the new tasks it was called upon to perform. In 1932 three People's Commissariats (for heavy, light, and timber industries) ...
Kulyab city, southwestern Tajikistan. It lies in the valley of the Iakhsu River and at the foot of the Khazratishokh Range, 125 miles (200 km) southeast of Dushanbe. The city was a trading point on the ...
Tianjin The Tianjin People's Congress is the city's chief administrative body. Its predecessor, the Municipal Revolutionary Committee, was established in 1967 during the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution ...
|
Related topics from Ask NewsCompanies Thaw Credit Freeze with Supply Chain Finance Solution
Supply and Demand Chain Executive - Found Oct. 14, 2008 ... that links global companies, their suppliers and third-party financial institutions in a secure Web environment. Through supply chain finance...
|
|
Companies Thaw Credit Freeze With PrimeRevenue Supply Chain Finance ...
Amitive Brings BPM into the Supply Chain
EBizQ.net - Found Oct. 14, 2008 ... who outsource production to third-party contract manufacturers, to drive a continuous synchronization of demand and supply capabilities...
|
|
Sri Lanka Electricity Board disconnects former UPFA Minister's power ...
Colombo Page - Found Oct. 10, 2008 CEB) has reportedly disconnected the power supply to the late Minister of Nation Building D.M. Dassanayake's residence and the party office...
|
|
Political party: Cast your vote for an election-night get-together ...
Fresno Bee - Found Oct. 9, 2008 Sales Science Skilled Labor - Trades Strategy - Planning Supply Chain ... of the nation hangs in the balance - what better excuse for a party?
|
|
Roxas on Petron sale: Ensure oil supply
Philippines Daily Tribune - Found Oct. 5, 2008 Liberal Party president Sen. Mar Roxas yesterday said the government must maintain a mechanism to ensure adequate oil supply in the country even ...
|
|
Whatâs a party without balloons?
MPNnow.com - Found Oct. 13, 2008 ... of Party World Plus, 980 Ridge Road, who opened the doors to the new party supply store on June 14. Last year, Jones had a birthday party for...
|
|
Companies Thaw Credit Freeze With PrimeRevenue Supply Chain Finance ...
MarketWatch - Found Oct. 13, 2008 Buyers'), their suppliers ('Suppliers'), and third-party Financial Institutions in a secure web environment. Through Supply Chain Finance...
|
|
Companies Thaw Credit Freeze With PrimeRevenue Supply Chain Finance ...
Business Wire - Found Oct. 13, 2008 Buyers), their suppliers (Suppliers), and third-party Financial Institutions in a secure web environment. Through Supply Chain Finance...
|
|
Companies Thaw Credit Freeze With PrimeRevenue Supply Chain Finance ...
Calibre Macro World - Found Oct. 13, 2008 Buyers"), their suppliers ("Suppliers"), and third-party Financial Institutions in a secure web environment. Through Supply Chain Finance...
|
|
|
Related topics from Technorati |
|
|
|