Computerworld Quickstudies
(http://www.computerworld.com/quickstudies)
Brief, concise overviews of key business and technology related concepts. Over 350 quickstudies are available.
Campbell R. Harvey's Hypertextual Finance Glossary
(http://www.duke.edu/~charvey/Classes/wpg/glossary.htm)
Competing with Investor Words as the largest finance glossary is the Harvey's Finance Glossary. Boasting 7,200 terms and over 18,000 cross-references, this is an excellent resource for finance and investment definitions and acronyms. Browseable alphabetically only.
Dictionary of Small Business
(http://www.small-business-dictionary.org/)
A dictionary of over 2,500 of the most commonly used terms encountered by the start-up entrepreneur, the small business person and the student of business theory.
Global Investor Glossary
(http://www.finance-glossary.com/pages/home.htm)
A glossary of 2,000 investing terms with extensive definitions and cross-references.
Investor Words
(http://www.investorwords.com)
A massive glossary of 6,000 terms and 20,000 cross-references makes this one of the most extensive investment/financial glossaries on the Web. Searchable and browsable.
Motley Fool Glossary
(http://www.fool.com/school/Glossary/glossary.htm)
The Motley Fool's Glossary is not as extensive or as heavily cross-referenced as some other glossaries. The definitions are written with a novice user in mind and are clear and jargon free.
Yahoo! Finance - Financial Glossary
(http://biz.yahoo.com/f/g/g.html)
Yahoo! provides access to an extensive collection of investing terms with clear and short definitions. This glossary is especially strong in acronyms.
Acronym Finder
(http://www.acronymfinder.com)