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stockIn botany, any of a group of herbaceous plants commonly grown as garden ornamentals. Many cultivated varieties, including simple-stemmed, queen's, and ten-week stocks, have been derived from the wild stock (M. incana); night-scented (or evening) stock (M. bicornis) becomes aromatic at night. (Genus Matthiola, family Cruciferae.) stockIn the US, each share of stock represents proportional ownership in a corporation. Once offered by a corporation going public, stock can be bought and sold on a stock exchange, but the corporation has no obligation to buy it back. Sold to raise capital, stock gives the holder specified rights, including the right to examine the books and the right to vote for the directors. Dividends can be paid, in cash or in stock, when the corporation declares a profit. stock
stock
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So he sat down, and the fox began to run, and away they went over stock and stone so quick that their hair whistled in the wind. He's on the Stock Exchange, and he's a typical broker. THE Chief of the Weather Bureau having predicted a fine day, a Thrifty Person hastened to lay in a large stock of umbrellas, which he exposed for sale on the sidewalk; but the weather remained clear, and nobody would buy. |
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