multinational

English

Etymology

multi- + national

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -æʃənəl

Adjective

multinational (not comparable)

  1. Of, or involving more than two nations (externally between countries or internally in a country).
    • 2009 September 23, Anna Louie Sussman, “Yes, We Speak Cupcake”, in New York Times:
      AS a young student at the multinational Aramco school in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, Fadi Jaber, a son of Palestinian refugees, always preferred his American classmates’ cupcakes, brownies and chocolate chip cookies to his mother’s pastries: knafah, qatayef and baklawah.
  2. (of a business organization) Operating, or having subsidiary companies in multiple countries (especially more than two).
    • 1970, Martyn, Howe, “Foreward”, in Multinational Business Management, Rowman & Littlefield (imprint Lexington Books), →ISBN:
      By operating within many nations, but ouside them at the same time, multinational firms create possibilities of change even in the world political structure

Derived terms

Translations

Noun

multinational (plural multinationals)

  1. A multinational company.

Translations

Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from English multinational.

Pronunciation

  • (Netherlands) IPA(key): /ˌmʏl.tiˈnɛ.ʃə.nəl/
  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: mul‧ti‧na‧ti‧o‧nal

Noun

multinational m (plural multinationals, diminutive multinationaltje n or multinationalletje n)

  1. a multinational company

French

Etymology

From multi- + national.

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Adjective

multinational (feminine multinationale, masculine plural multinationaux, feminine plural multinationales)

  1. multinational

Further reading

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