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10 Definitions

Third Party

For Third Party we have terms and definitions in 10 topics. The topics are Accident Compensation, Accounting, Atari, Auto Insurance, Car Insurance, Legal, Accident Compensation, Parliamentary Procedure, Personal Injury Law, Political and Technology.



Third Party (Accident Compensation)


Generally refers to the other driver or drivers involved in an accident


Third Party (Accounting)

is someone other than the principals directly involved in a transaction or agreement.


Third Party (Atari)

A company that produces software for a system that is not its own. For example, Activision making games for the Atari 2600.


See more Atari Terms ...

Third Party (Auto Insurance)

Basic motor insurance cover. Third party covers damage to others' cars but not to your own. It is also the cheapest form of policy.


Third Party (Car Insurance)

Basic motor insurance cover. Third party covers damage to others' cars but not to your own. It is also the cheapest form of policy.


Third Party (Legal, Accident Compensation)

Generally refers to the other driver or drivers involved in an accident


Third Party (Parliamentary Procedure)

(tiers parti) - Generally, a political party represented in the House that is smaller in size than the Official Opposition party.


Third Party (Personal Injury Law)

A person, business, or government agency not actively involved in a legal proceeding, agreement, or transaction.
Third Party Benefit:. In insurance law, third party benefits refer to the amount of available coverage that the at-fault party has in bodily injury and property damage.


Third Party (Political)

Can refer either to a minor party, such as the Socialist Party or the Libertarian Party, whose support is so small that it has no significant effect on a national election, or to a party that presents a viable alternative to the Republicans or Democrats. During the late eighteenth and nineteenth century, there were a number of powerful third parties in American politics. The Greenback Party, the Union Labor Party, and the Peoples' Party, for example, forced the major parties to pass significant antimonopoly and labor legislation. In 1912, Theodore Roosevelt's Progressive Party split the Republican vote and helped the Democrats win back the White House. In 1996, Ross Perot's Reform Party won 7 percent of the vote in the presidential election. However, in modern times third parties have had no success in breaking the two-party system, and often complain that restrictive ballot access requirements in many states are designed by the major parties to keep them off the ballot.


Third Party (Technology)

A company that manufactures and sells accessories or peripherals for use with a major manufacturer's computer or peripheral, usually without any involvement from the major manufacturer.




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