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  2. Corporate jargon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_jargon

    Corporate jargon (variously known as corporate speak, corporate lingo, business speak, business jargon, management speak, workplace jargon, corpospeak, corporatese, or commercialese) is the jargon often used in large corporations, bureaucracies, and similar workplaces.

  3. 8 Phrases to Eliminate From Your Work Vocabulary - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/2016-01-26-8-phrases-to...

    Getty By Alison Green We all have certain fallback phrases we use at work. But some of them can be seriously annoying to co-workers and alarming to managers. Here are eight phrases you might use ...

  4. From trophy wife to hedge fund to HENRY, 8 iconic phrases ...

    www.aol.com/finance/trophy-wife-hedge-fund-henry...

    But return-to-office mandates at the largest companies, including Goldman Sachs, Disney, and Amazon, demonstrate the prevalence of that tension between individual choice and organizational conformity.

  5. Office supplies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_supplies

    Office supplies are consumables and equipment regularly used in offices by businesses and other organizations, by individuals engaged in written communications, recordkeeping or bookkeeping, janitorial and cleaning, and for storage of supplies or data.

  6. Jargon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jargon

    Jargon, also referred to as "technical language", is "the technical terminology or characteristic idiom of a special activity or group". [8] Most jargon is technical terminology (technical terms), involving terms of art [9] or industry terms, with particular meaning within a specific industry.

  7. American English vocabulary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_English_vocabulary

    American English has always shown a marked tendency to use nouns as verbs. [13] Examples of verbed nouns are interview, advocate, vacuum, lobby, pressure, rear-end, transition, feature, profile, spearhead, skyrocket, showcase, service (as a car), corner, torch, exit (as in "exit the lobby"), factor (in mathematics), gun ("shoot"), author (which disappeared in English around 1630 and was ...

  8. Glossary of HVAC terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_HVAC_terms

    Building codes may require zoning to save energy in commercial buildings. Zones are defined in the building to reduce the number of HVAC subsystems, and thus initial cost. For example, for perimeter offices, rather than one zone for each office, all offices facing west can be combined into one zone.

  9. Office management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_management

    Office management is a profession involving the design, implementation, evaluation, and maintenance of the process of work within an office or other organization, ...