organization
IPA: ɔrgʌnʌzˈeɪʃʌn
noun
- (uncountable) The quality of being organized.
- (uncountable) The way in which something is organized, such as a book or an article.
- (countable) A group of people or other legal entities with an explicit purpose and written rules.
- (countable) A group of people consciously cooperating.
- (baseball) A major league club and all its farm teams.
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Examples of "organization" in Sentences
- This drew forth another question: "What do you understand by the term organization?"
- The website for the organization is a blog with no list of staff, board of directors or donor information.
- But the current members can tell you about the current in-fighting, the good things that the organization is attempting to do, and why they joined this particular group.
- Unless the organization has a flattened structure where employees can attend Board Meetings, then the sole source of information about the organization is the CEO or ED.
- While the difference in organization is of common knowledge, the consequences do not seem to have been recognized when democratic states began intervening in economic life.
- If, then, every known organization is redolent with contrivance, and teems with marks of design, by what analogy can we conclude that _Deity's organization_ is devoid of these properties? "
- "Just as remarkable as Crow's ability to raise money is his bewilderingly complex organization -- if, indeed, the term organization can be accurately applied," Fortune magazine reported in 1973.
- We can define the term organization as two or more individuals who are interacting with each other within a deliberately structured set up and working in an interdependent way to achieve some common objectives.
- She says she's explained that her organization is a legitimate nonprofit serving vets, whose identities are verified through discharge paperwork and checked again with the Department of Veterans Affairs and other federal agencies.
- The term organization includes the conversion of the effusion into tissue, taking its character from the subjacent structures; the development of false membranes: and the formation of certain heteromorphous products, as Tubercle, Cancer, &c.
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