释义 |
redeˈployment [re- 5 a.] Movement or reallocation (of troops, labour, resources, etc.); reorganization for greater efficiency; transfer to alternative employment.
1945Time 12 Feb. 17/2 The new blueprint for U.S. re⁓deployment calls for an army of 6,500,000 men to defeat Japan. 1945Newsweek 28 May 28/3 The redeployment of three and four star generals from the European theater. 1949Manch. Guardian Weekly 28 Apr. 3/3 Only by re⁓deployment of labour can higher wages, greater productivity, and lower costs be achieved. 1955Times 7 July 13/1 The growth of deposits had been checked (partly, as with Martins, by the redeployment of funds by large customers). 1959Economist 3 July 42/1 Redeployment of liquid resources in this way, incidentally, can also keep directors and managers in the powerful style to which they are accustomed. 1966Daily Tel. 2 Nov. 1/2 Temporary bridging finance for house purchase also has a special importance at a time when the redeployment of labour needs to be encouraged. 1970New Scientist 24 Sept. 613/2 If they all have similar reserves of manpower, there should soon be no shortage for the Soviet Union's developing economy. The question may then be one of retraining and redeployment. 1974Financial Times 20 Mar. 18/8 If they cancel the entire venture now, some 21,000 workers on the programme in Britain and a similar number in France will face either redundancy or redeployment. |