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capitalization
[kap-i-tl-uh-zey-shuhn]
noun
the act or process of capitalizing.
the authorized or outstanding stocks and bonds of a corporation.
Accounting.
the total investment of the owner or owners in a business enterprise.
the total corporate liability.
the total arrived at after addition of liabilities.
conversion into stocks or bonds.
the act of computing the present value of future periodical payments.
capitalization
/ ˌæɪəɪˈɪʃə /
noun
the act of capitalizing
the sum so derived
accounting the par value of the total share capital issued by a company, including the loan capital and sometimes reserves
the act of estimating the present value of future payments, earnings, etc
the act of writing or printing in capital letters
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of capitalization1
Example Sentences
Funding will ideally come from a Financial Transaction Tax or some form of levy on market capitalization.
Company executives also addressed a recent report in the Wall Street Journal that Netflix had internal financial goals of reaching a $1 trillion market capitalization and doubling its revenue by 2030.
The coins now hold a 41% share of the total Web3 market capitalization — the decentralized platforms that use digital assets — according to data compiled by Social Capital Markets.
The company behind ChatGPT - OpenAI - has been a global leader in the burgeoning field and Nvidia has become one of the highest valued companies in the world, when measured by market capitalization.
In order for Musk to reach each milestone, Tesla’s market capitalization must increase in $50-billion increments.
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Related 51Թs
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When To Use
Capitalization is the act of using capital letters.A capital letter (A, B, C, etc.) is a letter of the alphabet that is bigger than the lower case version (e.g., c, o, s) and sometimes styled differently as well (e.g., a, b, q). In English, we use capital letters for several reasons.The most common reasons we use capitalization in English are to begin a sentence and to indicate a proper noun.We capitalize the first letter of the first word of a sentence to show that this is the beginning of the sentence, as in Who took my wallet?This includes complete sentences that are used in quotations, as in Mom said, “We are going to the mall.”We also use capitalization for proper nouns, that is a particular person, place, or thing, like James, New York, or the Library of Congress.Sometimes, though, companies name themselves or their products without any capitalization or with capitalization in the middle of the word (sometimes called camel case), as in adidas, eBay, and WikiAnswers.The pronoun I is always capitalized, no matter where it is used in a sentence, as in He went to the park, but I stayed home.
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