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corporate

relating to a large company / legal entity / collective

/ˈkɔːp(ə)ɹət/

Adjective

Evokes the image of a vast, impersonal machinery of business. While it technically refers to legal structures, in common usage it often carries a sterile or rigid connotation, suggesting bureaucracy, polished professionalism, and a lack of individual personality. In a positive context, it implies stability, scale, and organized efficiency. In a negative or critical context (e.g., "corporate greed" or "corporate speak"), it suggests coldness, conformity, and the prioritization of profit over human elements. Distinct from "business," which can be a small shop or a freelance venture; "corporate" specifically implies a large-scale organization with a hierarchical structure and legal incorporation.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon, Karen is frantically organizing a school fundraiser via her phone.
Eleanor Smith

KAREN WHY IS THE BAKE SALE SO CORPORATE NOW? WHERE ARE THE HOMEMADE COOKIES?

Eleanor Smith
Karen Smith
Karen Smith

It's called branding, Eleanor. Get with the program.

💡
Eleanor is criticizing the overly professional and commercialized nature of the school event using 'corporate'. Karen responds with the idiom 'get with the program', meaning to adapt to the current way of doing things or accept a new set of rules/expectations.

Meanings

Adjectiverelating to a large company

Relating to a large company or group.

"The firm is moving toward a more corporate structure to handle international growth."

Adjectivelegal entity

Formed into a legal corporation; constituting a single entity.

"The organization's corporate identity was rebranded last year."

Adjectivecollective

Shared by all members of a group; collective.

"The board expressed their corporate responsibility to the environment."

Etymology

Derived from the Latin word corporatus, the past participle of corporare, meaning to form into a body. This stems from corpus, meaning body, which evolved through Middle French as corporatif before entering English in the 16th century to describe a legal entity acting as a single body.

Related Words

Last Updated: June 8, 2026Report an Error