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Flaviaferraz Posted 19 years ago
Legal Studies

Exclusiveness or exclusivity

0Hello everybody02br
02br
00I was reading an agreement (services agreement) and found a clause which set forth that service provider could render services to contractor only within a certain territory. The clause title was "Exclusiveness". First I thought it was wrong, I thought the noun was exclusivity. But then I found it in Oxford Dictionary. I was wondering whether there is any difference between them (maybe exclusiveness should be used to mean the exclusiveness of luxury items, for instance). Can anyone help? Which word should I use in such kind of contract? 0-
  

Top answer

02br 02br 00Within the limitation of my knowledge exclusivity is the legal term. com

  • 02br 02br 00Within the limitation of my knowledge exclusivity is the legal term.
  • com
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2 Answers
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0 Hi,02br
01b02br
02br
00Exclusiveness02b
00 - tendency to associate with only a select group (and often used in the classical literature).02br
02br
01b00Exclusivity 02b00-02br
00contract term in which one party grants another party sole rights with regard to a particular business function.02br
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Hi, everybody!

Accordding to Oxford Business Dictionary,

Exclusivity
  1. is the right to be the only person or organization to do sth: Agents are given exclusivity to trade in certain areas.
  2. is (also exclusiveness // less frequent) the fact that people see a product or service as being of high quality and expensive and therefore only a small gro

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