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Furniture, fixtures, and equipment (or FF&E) (sometimes Furniture, furnishings, and equipment [1] [2]) is an accounting term used in valuing, selling, or liquidating a company or a building. FF&E are movable furniture , fixtures , or other equipment that have no permanent connection to the structure of a building or utilities. [ 3 ]
Shop fitting is a profession that involves the fit-out of retail outlets like corner shops, department stores, convenience stores, supermarkets and hypermarkets with equipment, fixtures and fittings. It’s carried out by a shop fitter who executes all planning, design, layout and installation of equipment and services.
Fixtures are treated as a part of real property, particularly in the case of a security interest. A classic example of a fixture is a building, which, in the absence of language to the contrary in a contract of sale, is considered part of the land itself and not a separate
This is a list of furniture types. Furniture can be free-standing or built-in to a building. [1] They typically include pieces such as chairs, tables, storage units, and desks. [1] These objects are usually kept in a house or other building to make it suitable or comfortable for living or working in.
[4] [5] In British English, they are often called brown goods by producers and sellers. [ 6 ] [ n 1 ] In the 2010s, this distinction is absent in large big box consumer electronics stores , which sell entertainment, communication and home office devices, light fixtures and appliances, including the bathroom type.
FF&E is intended to include moveable personal property, Fixtures are fixed to the building and not moveable. OSHA and AIA use Furnishings. More sources are required. It seems accountants generally use Fixtures, is there a definitive source for that? OptimisticBison 00:52, 26 June 2021 (UTC)
A couple in Australia have been accused of faking their young son's cancer diagnosis "It will be alleged that the accused shaved their 6-year-old child’s head, eyebrows, placed him in a ...
The English usage, referring specifically to household objects, is specific to that language; [5] French and other Romance languages as well as German use variants of the word meubles, which derives from Latin mobilia, meaning "moveable goods". [6]