corporate

corporate — adjective

1. relating to the central management, operations, and overall direction of a major

1.形容詞B1
釋義

relating to the central management, operations, and overall direction of a major business organisation, as opposed to its separate branches or local offices.

例句

The corporate headquarters in Nairobi handles payroll for all East African branches.

collocation: corporate headquarters

Aiko earns a corporate vice president's salary after fifteen years with the same firm.

collocation: corporate vice president

同義詞
  • company

    used attributively before nouns (company policy, company car); less formal than 'corporate'

  • business

    broader meaning — covers small shops to large firms; 'corporate' specifically denotes large enterprises

  • commercial

    focuses on profit-making and trade rather than organizational structure

  • organizational

    broader and less specific to business; can apply to any group or institution

反義詞
  • local

    contrasts the scale — local branch operations vs. central corporate management

  • independent

    contrasts legal/organizational status — independent businesses are not part of a large corporation

文法句型

corporate + noun (headquarters, strategy, profits, culture)

用法筆記

Frequently used before nouns such as headquarters, strategy, culture, profits, and governance. This is the most common sense of 'corporate' in everyday business English.

常見錯誤

I need to call the corporate about the shipment.
I need to call the corporation about the shipment.
💡'Corporate' is an adjective; use 'corporation' (noun) for the organization itself.
She found a job in corporate America' (as a noun meaning 'the corporate world').
She found a job in the corporate sector.
💡Although 'corporate' can be used as a noun in informal American English, 'corporate sector' or 'corporation' is clearer for learners.

2. shared, done, or experienced by every person in a group as a whole, rather than

2.形容詞B2
釋義

shared, done, or experienced by every person in a group as a whole, rather than by any single individual alone.

例句

The choir's corporate identity is shown by their matching blue robes and red banners.

collocation: corporate identity (shared group identity)

The farm workers made a corporate decision to ask for better housing conditions.

collocation: corporate decision (group decision)

同義詞
  • collective

    more common in non-business contexts; 'corporate' is more formal

  • joint

    often used for actions by two or more parties; 'corporate' emphasises the whole group as one body

  • shared

    simpler and more everyday; lacks the formal flavour of 'corporate'

  • communal

    suggests a community or neighbourhood rather than any formal group

反義詞
  • individual

    contrasts group action with one person's action

  • personal

    contrasts shared responsibility with private, individual responsibility

文法句型

corporate + noun (identity, responsibility, effort, decision)

用法筆記

This sense is more formal and less frequent than sense 1. It often appears in set phrases like 'corporate identity', 'corporate responsibility', and 'corporate decision.' Unlike sense 1, it does not involve a business context — the group can be any community, team, or organisation.

常見錯誤

The club made a corporate decision' (implying a large-business context).
The club made a collective decision.
💡For non-business groups, 'collective' or 'shared' better communicates the group-action meaning without confusing readers about sense 1.

3. given the legal status of an independent body that can own property, sign contra

3.形容詞B2
釋義

given the legal status of an independent body that can own property, sign contracts, and be held responsible for its own actions, separate from the people who own or run it.

例句

Wen registered her bakery as a corporate entity to protect her personal savings.

collocation: corporate entity (legal status)

GreenTech became a corporate body in 2022, allowing it to sign contracts independently.

collocation: corporate body (legal term)

同義詞
  • incorporated

    more specific legal term; 'incorporated' is the formal designation (e.g. 'Inc.'); 'corporate' is the broader descriptor

  • registered

    emphasises the act of official registration; less specific about the legal implications

  • chartered

    applies to organisations created by a government charter; typically for public bodies or professional groups

反義詞
  • unincorporated

    direct legal opposite — not recognised as a separate legal entity

文法句型

corporate + noun (entity, body, charter)

用法筆記

Primarily used in legal and formal contexts. Distinguish from sense 1: sense 3 focuses on the official legal status (incorporated vs. unincorporated), while sense 1 focuses on the scale and internal operations of a large business.

常見錯誤

We need a corporate lawyer for this merger' (meaning a lawyer who handles business contracts generally).
We need a corporate lawyer to draft the articles of incorporation.
💡The adjective 'corporate' in legal contexts refers to the legal structure of a corporation, not just any business matter.
They have a corporate agreement with the supplier' (meaning any business contract).
They formed a corporate entity before signing the supply contract.
💡'Corporate' describes legal status, not the type of document.