Is a company a "she" or "It"

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rodnikosh

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i need to write a contract for my company , i need to know if a company is a "She/Her" or "it".
for example:

"Circumstances that are beyond her control" or
"Circumstances that are beyond it control" ??
 

Odessa Dawn

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***NOT A TEACHER***

Welcome to the forum.

One of the most important things to remember when using written English is that you must stick to the following rules:

- Start every sentence with a capital letter.
- End every sentence with a single punctuation mark.
- Always capitalise the word "I".



[STRIKE]i[/STRIKE] I need to write a contract for my company. [STRIKE]i[/STRIKE]I need to know if a company is a "She/Her" or "it".
[STRIKE]f[/STRIKE]For example:

"Circumstances that are beyond her control"or
"Circumstances that are beyond it control"
?[STRIKE]?[/STRIKE]
 

Rover_KE

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'...beyond its control.'

Rover
 

SoothingDave

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Or "our" control, if you consider yourself part of the company. But you wouldn't use that in a contract. You would probably use "the company's control."
 

MartinEnglish

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Or "beyond their control" - companies fall into that group of nouns which are often referred to as plurals.
 

Gillnetter

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Or "our" control, if you consider yourself part of the company. But you wouldn't use that in a contract. You would probably use "the company's control."
Having written a number of these, and read more than I care to remember, I would use "the control of the Company (generally capitalized)", or, "the Company's control".
 

SoothingDave

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Having written a number of these, and read more than I care to remember, I would use "the control of the Company (generally capitalized)", or, "the Company's control".

Yes, usually "the Company" is defined early in the legal document. It's better than "the party of the first part."
 

Barb_D

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Yes, usually "the Company" is defined early in the legal document. It's better than "the party of the first part."

Are you a Marx Brothers fan?
 
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