Your Search word - Trin - did not match exactly any word.
Related Definitions
Extrinsic Value Extrinsic Value is defined as the difference between an option's market price, or premium, as well as its intrinsic value. It is one portion's worth that has been allocated by the variables...
Exclusive remedy doctrine Exclusive remedy doctrine in worker’s compensation insurance that states that worker’s compensation benefits should be the exclusive or sole source of recovery for workers who have a job-related accident
Family purpose doctrine Family purpose doctrine is a concept that imputes negligence committed by immediate family members while operating a family car
Intrinsic motivation Intrinsic motivation is doing something for its own sake because the activity itself is rewarding. Always contrasted with extrinsic motivation.
Act of state doctrine Act of state doctrine says that a nation is sovereign within its own borders, and Act of state doctrine domestic actions may not be questioned in
Extrinsic motivation Extrinsic motivation is doing something for reasons of reward or punishment external to the activity itself. Always contrasted with intrinsic motivation.
Decentring Decentring is the continuing to perceive a situation in a way that changing circumstances have rendered ineffective. A psychological version of cultural lag.
Customer relationship doctrine Customer relationship doctrine is the bank management strategy whose first priority is making loans to all those customers who meet
Real bills doctrine Real bills doctrine is a guiding principle (now discredited) for the conduct of monetary policy that states that as long as loans are made
Impossible trinity Impossible trinity— three attributes of a theoretical ideal currency: exchange rate stability, full financial integration, and monetary independence.