Big three
The big three is a term used to refer to three large powers or companies. Big threes often result in oligopolitic economic conditions.
- Big three Powers after World War II - United States, United Kingdom, Soviet Union
- Big three leaders of the Allies during the World War II - Winston Churchill, Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin
- Big three American auto makers Ford, General Motors, DaimlerChrysler
- Big three American broadcasting networks: CBS, NBC, ABC
- Big three American airlines: American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Airlines
- Big three Canadian Banks (formerly,) Bank of Montreal; Royal Bank of Canada; Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.
"Big Three" is also used to refer to the "Big Three" universities at the beginning of the twentieth century: Harvard, Yale, and Princeton.
See also:
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