释义 |
organiˈzational, a. [f. organization + -al1.] Of or pertaining to organization.
1938I. Kuhn Assigned to Adventure xxx. 315 Fox itself went through three complete organizational changes in less than two years. 1960Guardian 12 July 1/7 The high noon of the twentieth century ‘organisational man’. 1962A. Battersby Guide to Stock Control vii. 62 Such organizational problems are combined with investigations of the nervous systems of animals and the design of servo⁓mechanisms in the new studies called cybernetics. 1964M. Argyle Psychol. & Social Probl. xiv. 171 Organizational pathology refers to the tendency for organizations to become ineffective in several characteristic ways. The most familiar trouble is the over-elaboration of formal rules and procedures, seen by the outsider as ‘red-tape’. 1965New Society 22 Apr. 14/3 Industry has its problems. Can organisational psychology help? 1969J. Argenti Managem. Techniques v. 22 All organisations..have organisational problems. 1970T. Lupton Managem. & Social Sci. (ed. 2) iii. 71 The organizational environment for maximum performance and human satisfaction. 1973A. Dundes Mother Wit p. xiii, Having explained the organizational plan of the book, I should like to add a final word about the title. Hence organiˈzationally adv.
1933Times Lit. Suppl. 15 June 415/3 This is a moment for fresh, organizationally detached and sympathetically cooperative thinking. 1959Internat. Jrnl. Appl. Radiation & Isotopes VI. 305/1 Even were technical feasibility successfully achieved, the firms organizationally capable of using the process and exploiting its marginal advantages are few. 1962B.B.C. Handbk. 94 Organizationally, the External Services are an integral part of the BBC. 1976Nature 8 July 88/3 ‘Organisationally,’ it says, ‘OTA lacks the minimum of orderly structure.’ |