Concept cluster: Social systems > Collaboration or partnership
n
Alternative form of second party [(business, commerce) An individual or entity related to the first party in a business or transaction.]
v
(transitive) To adopt; to receive into a family as one's offspring
n
The office or function of an agent; also, the relationship between a principal and that person's agent.
adj
(of a person or thing) connected with something or another person.
v
(intransitive) To be associated with; to consort with.
n
A mediator between a buyer and seller.
n
The body or class of people who frequent an establishment or purchase a service, especially when considered as forming a more-or-less homogeneous group of clients in terms of values or habits.
n
A person involved with others in a conspiracy.
n
A joint credit.
n
A relationship between two or more employers which involves having rights and obligations concerning the same employee for the same work, such as the relationship between a contract agency and one of its clients.
n
A joint host alongside another (compare co-star).
n
Alternative spelling of comanager [One who comanages.]
n
Alternative spelling of cosponsor [A joint sponsor.]
n
A joint actor; one who acts with other people in some enterprise
n
Agency in common; joint agency.
n
A joint arbitrator; one who arbitrates with another.
n
Alternative spelling of co-conspirator. [A person involved with others in a conspiracy.]
n
A joint curator; one who cocurates.
n
The position or job of being an coeditor.
n
A joint executant.
n
A contributing factor.
v
(transitive) To serve as one of the joint heads of (an organization or department).
n
A joint host alongside another (compare costar).
n
Alternative form of colaborer [One who labors with another; an associate in labor.]
n
(management) An organized group of people or entities who collaborate towards a particular goal
n
Especially, a joint enterprise of whatever legal form for a purpose of business or in any way promoting the interests of the participants, sometimes with monopolistic or fraudulent intentions.
n
A joint or partner mediator (in various senses)
n
Obsolete spelling of committee [A body of one or more persons convened for the accomplishment of some specific purpose, typically with formal protocols.]
n
(US, Canada) One who leads other people who live in proximity to each other or share some common problem into an organization that acts in their shared self-interest.
n
A company whose business is to assist other entities come into regulatory compliance.
n
One who attends a conference.
n
One nominated in conjunction with another; a joint nominee.
n
An association or society.
n
A meeting or gathering.
v
(transitive) To keep in a coop.
n
One who, with another person or persons, organizes something.
n
alternative form of co-owner [Someone who owns something together with one or more other people.]
n
One who participates with another or others.
n
The act of participating with another or others; joint participation.
v
To form a joint partnership with somebody.
n
The state of being copartners in any undertaking.
n
A person who plays (in all senses) with another
n
A practitioner who works jointly with another.
n
A person or organization that serves as a joint regulator with others.
n
A joint settler; one who settles in a territory with another person or other people.
n
A joint sponsor.
n
Any of the parties involved in producing a coventure.
n
A joint winner; somebody who is declared a winner along with somebody else.
n
(figuratively) Someone who uses skill and tact in dealing with other people
n
One who directs; the person in charge of managing a department or directorate (e.g., director of engineering), project, or production (as in a show or film, e.g., film director).
n
Abbreviation of executrix. [(chiefly law) A female executor.]
n
A commission agent.
n
One who founds or establishes (especially said of a company, project, organisation, state)
n
The art of obtaining grants-in-aid.
n
One who helps; an aide; assistant; auxiliary.
n
An organization which has the responsibility of furnishing new recruits for employers who have a collective bargaining agreement with the trade union.
n
A cooperative partnership between two individuals or businesses in which profits and risks are shared.
n
The organization and motivation of people who work in an organization.
n
(often derogatory) The jargon used by management.
n
A type of organizational management in which people with similar skills are pooled for work assignments and may have more than one manager.
n
(military) An alliance or coalition.
v
(education) To form pairs to compare each other's answers to an exercise.
n
An assistant to a financial planner.
n
A person who is trained to assist a professional.
v
(intransitive, chiefly US, medicine) To act as a preceptor; to teach a physician-in-training by supervising their clinical practice.
n
Scholar appointed to inspect other scholars; a monitor.
n
Alternative form of public-private partnership [(politics, government, business) An arrangement by which one or more private firms agrees to fund, create, or operate a facility, service, or other element of public infrastructure (such as a school, hospital, or highway) which is usually the sole responsibility of government, in return for all or some of the revenue generated by that facility or service.]
n
An individual who assists a researcher, often on a contractual basis, with research in a commercial, academic, or private setting.
n
Market control based on a comprehensive series of negotiated agreements between business and the labour force.
n
An individual who works on behalf of a regional or international organization and is charged with investigating, monitoring and recommending solutions to specific human rights problems.
n
One who speaks as the voice of another person or a group of people.
n
(Internet, informal) supermoderator
n
(countable, Cambridge University) A tutorial session for an individual student or a small group.
n
An encounter group or similar group therapy method.
n
A joining of forces, especially between allies in a work of fiction
n
The cooperative effort of a team of people to achieve a common goal.
n
A place or an opportunity to speak, to express one's opinion; a platform or pulpit.
v
(transitive) To instruct or teach, especially an individual or small group.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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