Fortune 500

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English

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English Wikipedia has an article on:
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Proper noun

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the Fortune 500

  1. A list published annually by Fortune magazine of the 500 United States companies with the highest revenue.
    • 1987, Katherine V. Forrest, Murder at the Nightwood Bar, Alyson Publishing, →ISBN, page 65:
      I'm betting they're more listings from the Fortune 500.
    • 2004, Matt Ruff, Sewer, Gas and Electric: The Public Works Trilogy, Grove Press, →ISBN, page 42:
      If he were a corporation instead of a criminal he'd be in the Fortune 500 by now.
    • 2004, Fern Michaels, Payback, →ISBN, Prologue:
      Myra Rutledge, heiress to a Fortune 500 candy company, looked around her state-of-the-art kitchen, at the pots bubbling on the stove, at the table set for two.
  2. Collectively, the members of that list.
    • 1990, Sue Grafton, "G" is for Gumshoe, Henry Holt and Company, →ISBN, page 154:
      Abbott was in his late sixties and looked like a retired Fortune 500 executive in a three-piece suit, complete with manicured nails and a Rolex watch.
    • 1990, Michael Novak, Toward a Theology of the Corporation, American Enterprise Institute, →ISBN, page 20:
      In other words, a majority of the Fortune 500 are of the size of universities, from 500 up to about 40000 employees.
    • 1999, Steve Fiffer, Three Quarters, Two Dimes and a Nickel: A Memoir of Becoming Whole, The Free Press, →ISBN, page 170:
      Few sportswear or sports equipment companies could be found pitching their products on television; and even fewer could be found among the Fortune 500.
    • 2003, Joel C. Rosenberg, The Last Jihad, Tor/Forge, →ISBN, page 23:
      Bennett didn't appear on CNBC, or kibitz with Maria Bartiromo, or speak at Fortune 500 conferences, or get himself profiled in the Wall Street Journal.

Noun

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Fortune 500 (plural Fortune 500s)

  1. (by extension, informal) Any member of that list.
    • 2000, Susan F. Shultz, The Board Book, →ISBN, page 13:
      If logic and demonstrations of success are not impetus enough, realize that activists are now looking beyond Fortune 500s.
    • 2005, Amy Scheibe, What Do You Do All Day?, St. Martin's Press, →ISBN, page 53:
      I shrink a little at the idea of Portia breaking another glass ceiling on her way to what can only be president or CEO of a Fortune 500.