[
UK
/ɪnsˈaɪdɐ/
]
[ US /ˌɪnˈsaɪdɝ/ ]
[ US /ˌɪnˈsaɪdɝ/ ]
NOUN
- an officer of a corporation or others who have access to private information about the corporation's operations
How To Use insider In A Sentence
- Seeking out the Iberian meeting places requires a good deal of detailed observation and help from insiders. Migrants in Modern France: Population Mobility in the Later Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
- Insider trading could be one phrase for that. Times, Sunday Times
- If it became possible for shareholders to sue firms where those firms might reasonably have protected them from insider trading, corporate Australia's complaisance towards insider trading could take a healthy hit.
- Do moral arguments provide an unsatisfactory basis upon which to prohibit insider dealing?
- The FSA has been trying for years to claim a big scalp as part of a failing effort to stamp out insider trading. Times, Sunday Times
- He has acted as one of the campaign's unofficial advisers, according to an insider. Times, Sunday Times
- Insiders said the move was 'a matter of hours' away last night. The Sun
- Industry insiders and experts discuss the causes of aviophobia and, more importantly, how best to overcome it. Times, Sunday Times
- Yesterday he was to be arraigned on new charges of insider trading, filing false tax forms and conspiracy to falsify books and records in an expanded indictment unveiled May 1.
- But for those who believe in watching the buys and sales of insiders it is an interesting move, particularly when it is backed up by another key company official's deals.