Limited

Limited may refer to:

  • Limited company, a company in which the liability of its members is limited to what they have invested in the company
    • Limited liability company, a limited company that blends elements of partnership and corporate structures - primarily in the United States
    • Private company limited by shares, a limited company whose shares are not public - primarily in Commonwealth countries
    • Private company limited by guarantee, primarily for non-profit organisations - in Britain and Ireland
    • Public limited company, a limited company whose shares are sold to the public - primarily in Commonwealth countries
    • Limited partnership, a partially limited company where liability is limited for limited partners, but not general partners
    • Limited liability partnership, generally a limited company where liability is limited for all partners
    • Limited liability limited partnership, a limited company where liability is limited for all partners - United States
  • Limited Brands, an American company - owners of Victoria's Secret, Bath & Body Works and others
  • The Limited, an American apparel company
  • Buick Limited, a car produced between 1936 and 1942 and during 1958
  • Limited express, a type of train service
  • Limited Inc, a 1988 book by Jacques Derrida

Famous quotes containing the word limited:

    The limitless future of childhood shrinks to realistic proportions, to one of limited chances and goals; but, by the same token, the mastery of time and space and the conquest of helplessness afford a hitherto unknown promise of self- realization. This is the human condition of adolescence.
    Peter Blos (20th century)

    If women’s role in life is limited solely to housewife/mother, it clearly ends when she can no longer bear more children and the children she has borne leave home.
    Betty Friedan (20th century)

    ...women were fighting for limited freedom, the vote and more education. I wanted all the freedom, all the opportunity, all the equality there was in the world. I wanted to belong to the human race, not to a ladies’ aid society to the human race.
    Rheta Childe Dorr (1866–1948)