Limited company is a common word in Japanese. Japanese pseudonyms: かぶしきがぃしゃ are actually two independent words: company and enterprise. Korean also uses this usage: (Corporation). A joint-stock company is a Japanese joint-stock company, and Japanese enterprises are called "joint-stock companies".
Extended data
Origin:
Japan's "commercial law" legislation refers to German law, introducing its joint-stock company (literally translated as "joint-stock association") and translating it into "joint-stock company". During the guarantee period of the shogunate, certain wholesalers were approved as "middlemen", and merchants organized themselves to pay the shogunate to monopolize the right to buy and sell goods. Each unit is a "Zhu Jian", so the above-mentioned foreign organization form is called "joint stock", also known as shares.
Joint stock company (かぶしき): the meaning of shares, equity and stock.
Club (かぃしゃ): the meaning of company, limited company and business firm.
Japan calls shares "plants", such as a share, and Japan calls them "plants". A company that shareholders raise funds to operate is called a limited company, and it is called a "joint stock company" in Japan. ?
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