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  2. Criticism of Tesco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_Tesco

    Tesco's other store openings and expansions are sometimes contested by campaign groups. When a company controls more than 25% of a business sector in the UK, it is usually blocked from buying other companies in that sector (but not from increasing its market share through organic growth).

  3. Tesco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesco

    It now operates from 154 stores across Ireland. Like Tesco stores in the UK, these offer a home delivery shopping service available to 80% of the Irish population as well as petrol, mobile telephone, personal finance, flower delivery service, and a weight-loss programme. [119] Tesco's loyalty programme, Clubcard, is offered in the country.

  4. Pimm's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pimm's

    Pimm's and lemonade with mint sprigs and fruit. Pimm's is dark brown with a reddish tint, and a subtle taste of spice and citrus fruit. As a summer long drink, it is normally served as a Pimm's cup cocktail, a drink with "English-style" (clear and carbonated) lemonade, [3] as well as various chopped garnishes, particularly apple, cucumber, orange, lemon, strawberry and mint or borage, though ...

  5. Fine Fare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fine_Fare

    In 1959, multiple grocery retailers like Fine Fare only had 25% of the whole market. [19] The company went on a expansion plan in the late 50s and early 60s, designed by their own inhouse architect team lead by Bryan Russel Archer and by 1962 had opened 236 supermarkets across the Fine Fare, Coopers and Burton brands, 30% of the total number of ...

  6. Sparkling wine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sparkling_wine

    A glass of champagne. Sparkling wine is a wine with significant levels of carbon dioxide in it, making it fizzy. While it is common to refer to this as champagne, European Union countries legally reserve that word for products exclusively produced in the Champagne region of France.

  7. Ireland as a tax haven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ireland_as_a_tax_haven

    Made up 25 of the top 50 Irish companies, by 2017 turnover (see Table 2, below); the only non–U.S/non–Irish other companies are UK companies which either sell into Ireland, like Tesco, or date from pre–2009, when the UK reformed its corporate tax system to a "territorial" regime. [20]