disclosure
1disclosure — dis·clo·sure /dis klō zhər/ n: an act or instance of disclosing: as a: a lender s revelation of information to a consumer under the Truth in Lending Act that enables the consumer to make an intelligent decision about the loan b: the revelation to …
2Disclosure — may refer to: Philosophy World disclosure, a term referring to the way that humans make sense of the world Reflective disclosure, a term coined by philosopher Nikolas Kompridis Computers Full disclosure, disclosing full information about… …
3Disclosure — Dis*clo sure (?; 135), n. [See {Disclose}, v. t., and cf. {Closure}.] 1. The act of disclosing, uncovering, or revealing; bringing to light; exposure. [1913 Webster] He feels it [his secret] beating at his heart, rising to his throat, and… …
4Disclosure — Solicita una imagen para este artículo. Título Argentina: Acoso sexual España: Acoso …
5disclosure — (n.) 1590s; see DISCLOSE (Cf. disclose) + URE (Cf. ure). Formed in English, perhaps on model of CLOSURE (Cf. closure) …
6disclosure — (izg. disklòužer) m DEFINICIJA ekon. obveza svih korporacija čije se dionice nalaze u rukama velikog broja osoba, tj. kod javnih vlasnika, da moraju informirati javnost o pozitivnim ili negativnim promjenama, koje mogu utjecati na odluke o… …
7disclosure — [n] announcement, revelation acknowledgment, admission, advertisement, betrayal, blow by blow*, broadcast, confession, declaration, discovery, divulgation, divulgence, enlightenment, exposal, exposé, exposure, handout, impartance, impartation,… …
8disclosure — ► NOUN 1) the action of disclosing information. 2) a fact, especially a secret, that is disclosed …
9disclosure — [disklō′zhər] n. 1. a disclosing or being disclosed 2. a thing disclosed; revelation …
10disclosure — A company s release of all information pertaining to the company s business activity, regardless of how that information may influence investors. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary See also ownership disclosure Euroclear Clearing and Settlement… …