organize
IPA: ˈɔrgʌnaɪz
verb
- (transitive) To arrange in working order.
- (transitive) To constitute in parts, each having a special function, act, office, or relation; to systematize.
- (transitive, chiefly used in the past participle) To furnish with organs; to give an organic structure to; to endow with capacity for the functions of life
- (transitive, music) To sing in parts.
- (transitive, intransitive) To band together into a group or union that can bargain and act collectively; to unionize.
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Examples of "organize" in Sentences
- How we organize is also a major challenge to us as hospitals.
- The ability to communicate and organize is particularly important in political terms.
- Again, this tendency to organize is not conducive to the highest individual development.
- My "thing," if I want to organize, is solid communication with the people in the community.
- Barack Obama’s silence on the horrid crime in the city he attempted to organize, is both chilling and unacceptable.
- Furthermore, let us not forget that the abstract right to organize is not the same as the right when concretely exercised.
- The right of men to organize is no more to be questioned than your right or mine to be the citizen of the state to which we belong.
- The best motivation for me to clean and organize is to plan a party or have those friends over for dinner that I know will talk about how messy I am.
- To give just one particularly egregious example, in a case called Oakwood Healthcare Batista stripped millions of American workers of their right to unionize by holding that an employee who provides even minimal direction to their co-workers can be classified as a “supervisor” (The right of actual managers to organize is not protected under federal labor law).
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