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Midea Group (Chinese: 美的集团; pinyin: Měidì Jítuán; Jyutping: mei5 dik1 zaap6 tyun4) is a Chinese electrical appliance manufacturer, headquartered in Beijiao town, Shunde District, Foshan, Guangdong and listed on Shenzhen Stock Exchange since 2013.
This page was last edited on 5 September 2024, at 03:36 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Midea may refer to: Midea Group (美的集团), a Chinese electrical appliance manufacturer; Midea, Greece, a Greek town; Midea (Argolid), a citadel in the town of the same name; Midea or Mideia, name of four figures in Greek mythology; Midea, a genus of mites in the suborder Prostigmata; Midea, formerly a genus of moths (now Arsacia)
Electrolux made an initial public offering on the London Stock Exchange in 1928 (it was delisted in 2010) [8] and another on the Stockholm Stock Exchange in 1930. [9] [10] As of 2010 its shares trade on the NASDAQ OMX Nordic Market and over-the-counter. [11] Electrolux is an OMX Nordic 40 constituent stock.
Hotpoint is a brand of domestic appliances.Ownership of the brand is split between American company Whirlpool, which has the rights in Europe, [1] Chinese company Haier, which has the rights in the Americas and Turkish company Arcelik which has rights in Russia and the CIS.
1922 Eureka Model 9 vacuum ad, offering a 10-day home trial of the product. Eureka Vacuum Cleaner Company was founded in 1909 in Detroit, Mich. by Toronto, Canada-born real estate auctioneer Fred Wardell (1866–1952) [3] to sell vacuum cleaners for which he had acquired several patents. [4]
Miele exports products to global markets and is represented in 47 countries. Their expansion into the United States came in 1983, when they established corporate headquarters in Somerset, New Jersey. In 1999, they relocated to the new headquarters in Princeton, which was designed by the Driehaus Prize winner Michael Graves.
The Laws in Wales Acts 1535 and 1542 annexed Wales to England [19] to create the single legal entity, though legal differences remained. Further Acts meant this combined territory was referred to in law simply as 'England' from 1746 until 1967. Wales was described (in varying combinations) as the "country", "principality", and "dominion" of Wales.