waste of assets

waste of assets

Useful english dictionary. 2012.

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  • waste — n 1: destruction of or damage to property that is caused by the act or omission of one (as a lessee, mortgagor, or life tenant) having a lesser estate and is usu. to the injury of another (as an heir, mortgagee, or remainderman) with an interest… …   Law dictionary

  • Waste Management, Inc — Waste Management, Inc. Type Public Traded as NYSE: WM …   Wikipedia

  • waste — ▪ I. waste waste 1 [weɪst] noun 1. [uncountable] unwanted materials or substances that are left after a particular process: • The factory s byproduct waste is used to feed pigs. • illegal disposal of hazardous waste • Our primary business is… …   Financial and business terms

  • waste — In the popular sense, the failure to conserve. Loss of assets in the estate of a decedent through mismanagement by the executor or administrator. 31 Am J2d Ex & Ad § 265. In the technical sense, the destruction, misuse, alteration, or neglect of… …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • waste — 1. An alternative term for *spoilage arising from production processes. The term is sometimes restricted to the designation of spoilage with no resale value, but the words spoilage and waste are often used synonymously. 2. An alternative term for …   Auditor's dictionary

  • Municipal solid waste — Municipal waste redirects here. For other uses, see Municipal waste (disambiguation). Public infrastructure Assets and facilities Airports  …   Wikipedia

  • Allied Waste Industries — (NYSE|AW) is a Fortune 1000 company headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona. A vertically integrated company that owned and operated solid waste collection businesses, recycling facilities, and landfills, it was a leader in the solid waste industry in… …   Wikipedia

  • Troubled Assets Relief Program — The authority to establish and manage a Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP) became law 3 October 2008 as part of a proposed bailout of the U.S. financial system after the passage of H.R. 1424, which enacted the Emergency Economic Stabilization… …   Wikipedia

  • Firm-specific infrastructure — In macro economics the term infrastructure usually refers to public infrastructure. That is, that which provides or supports state services. There is also firm specific infrastructure such as factories, private roads, capital equipment, and other …   Wikipedia

  • Cleansing Service Group — is a privately owned waste management company in the United Kingdom. Cleansing Service Group provides services in the collection, treatment, recycling and disposal of numerous [1] waste streams from 20 locations throughout the UK. [2] Cleansing… …   Wikipedia

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