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2006-12-21 19:36:11 · 4 answers · asked by rakesh_bhatia2607 1 in Social Science Economics

4 answers

I mean it pretty literally, because I used to be a legal secretary. There is a great deal of difference in the way people do things and the way they think between the ones that get dressed in suits and ties if they are men, or "business attire" less easily defined if they are women (but always with nylon on their legs), and do that five times a week -- or four, if they have dress down day on Friday -- I say it is a great deal different between doing that and not doing that.

The ones that dress in business attire may also be other things, like bureaucrats and lawyers and whatnot; but the ones that do it for a corporate entity are the corporate community. And the world they see when they go from airport to hotel suite to airport to corporate conference room to cocktail lounge to . . . but you get the idea . . . is a world the rest of us rightly perceive as separate.

2006-12-21 19:48:41 · answer #1 · answered by auntb93again 7 · 0 0

Business organisations are generally called corporate world.

2006-12-22 03:37:40 · answer #2 · answered by Ram 2 · 0 0

Companies like Relaince, Tata, Aditya Birla those companies and other companies are collectively called as corporate world.

2006-12-22 03:43:42 · answer #3 · answered by Stunner_cool 5 · 0 0

it means..."business world:"

2006-12-22 03:44:03 · answer #4 · answered by elvisjohn 7 · 0 0

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