释义 |
incorporation
in·cor·po·rate I0091100 (ĭn-kôr′pə-rāt′)v. in·cor·po·rat·ed, in·cor·po·rat·ing, in·cor·po·rates v.tr.1. To unite (one thing) with something else already in existence: incorporated the letter into her diary.2. To admit as a member to a corporation or similar organization.3. To cause to merge or combine together into a united whole.4. To cause to form into a legal corporation: incorporate a business.5. To give substance or material form to; embody.v.intr.1. To become united or combined into an organized body.2. To become or form a legal corporation: San Antonio incorporated as a city in 1837.3. Linguistics To move from the head of one phrase to the head of another, forming a new word by affixing onto that head, as in certain languages when a noun object of a verb is affixed to the verb.adj. (-pər-ĭt)1. Combined into one united body; merged.2. Formed into a legal corporation. [Middle English incorporaten, from Late Latin incorporāre, incorporāt-, to form into a body : Latin in-, causative pref.; see in-2 + Latin corpus, corpor-, body; see corpus.] in·cor′po·ra·ble (-pər-ə-bəl) adj.in·cor′po·ra′tion n.in·cor′po·ra′tive adj.in·cor′po·ra′tor n.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | incorporation - consolidating two or more things; union in (or into) one bodyconsolidation, integration - the act of combining into an integral whole; "a consolidation of two corporations"; "after their consolidation the two bills were passed unanimously"; "the defendants asked for a consolidation of the actions against them" | | 2. | incorporation - learning (of values or attitudes etc.) that is incorporated within yourselfinternalisation, internalizationlearning, acquisition - the cognitive process of acquiring skill or knowledge; "the child's acquisition of language"introjection - (psychology) unconscious internalization of aspects of the world (especially aspects of persons) within the self in such a way that the internalized representation takes over the psychological functions of the external objectsintrojection - (psychoanalysis) the internalization of the parent figures and their values; leads to the formation of the superego | | 3. | incorporation - including by incorporatinginclusion - the act of includingannexation, appropriation - incorporation by joining or uniting |
incorporationnoun merger, federation, blend, integration, unifying, inclusion, fusion, absorption, assimilation, amalgamation, coalescence the incorporation of two airlines into oneTranslationsincorporationcostituzione [di società]fusione [di società]incorporation
incorporation: see corporationcorporation, in law, organization enjoying legal personality for the purpose of carrying on certain activities. Most corporations are businesses for profit; they are usually organized by three or more subscribers who raise capital for the corporate activities by selling shares ..... Click the link for more information. .incorporation - the process in which the occupational and political organizations of the working class are accommodated within capitalist society.
- the argument that working-class consciousness has been shaped by the values and interests of other, dominant, classes.
The concepts have a place in the arguments about working-CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS and CLASS IMAGERY. The first usage, for example, is resonant of the arguments about a separate status group within the working class, especially in the 19th century – the LABOUR ARISTOCRACY. The second might be compared to discussions of HEGEMONY. Often the distinction between sense 1 and sense 2 is analytical; in practice, organization and consciousness are treated in an integrated, coextensive way. Incorporation is one of many concepts which have been proposed to explain the predominantly reformist attitudes of the working classes of capitalist societies. It has been particularly influential in UK studies. The extension of citizenship, and voting and welfare rights, for example, and the establishment of‘respectable’, skilled, male trade unionism after 1850, have been seen both as the product of working-class struggle and as a means of institutionalizing, and thus containing the level of, industrial and political conflict. The Parliamentary Labour Party has also been a major element in the incorporation of the working class into existing structures. In the 1960s, proposed and actual trade-union legislation which attempted to give the state a continuous role in monitoring and regulating relations between employers and unions has been explained in terms of the incorporation of union militancy into stable and routine state structures (see also CORPORATISM). Between 1945 and 1979 the involvement of trade-union leaders in government committees, the acceptance of knighthoods, etc., by union leaders, and the willingness of unionists to cooperate in state-inspired initiatives like ACAS, have all been seen as examples of incorporation, i.e. as reducing militancy by channelling potential conflict, leadership and values into forms which can be accommodated by the status quo. Incorporation the combination into one morphological unit of two or more semantemes, which are mobile components with separate lexical meanings; the number and order of the components are determined in each instance by the content of the utterance, but the relations between them correspond to syntactic relations. In Chukchi, for example, incorporation is used to express attributive relations (ga-ηran-tor-melgar-ma, “with two new guns”), adverbial relations (m∂t-winw∂-ekwet-∂rk∂n, “we are leaving secretly”), object relations (m∂t-kupre-g∂nrit-∂rk∂n, “we are protecting the nets”), and object relations expanded by attributives (m∂t-kupre-g∂nrit-∂rk∂n, “we are protecting the new nets”). Such an incorporative complex is neither a word (because it may be divided into lexicosemantic units) nor a combination of words (because it has morphological integrity). Incorporation occurs together with agglutination in languages; the two are closely interrelated and mutually conditioned. REFERENCESStebnitskii, S. N. Iz istorii padezhnykh suffiksov v koriakskom i chukotskom iazykakh. Leningrad, 1941. Skorik, P. Ia. “O sootnoshenii aggliutinatsii i inkorporatsii.” In thecollection Morfologicheskaia tipologiia i problema klassifikatsii iazykov. Moscow-Leningrad, 1965.P. IA. SKORIK incorporation
incorporation [in-kor″po-ra´shun] 1. the union of one substance with another, or with others, in a composite mass.2. an unconscious defense mechanism in which a person figuratively ingests the psychic representation of another person, or parts of another person.i·den·ti·fi·ca·tion (ī-den'ti-fi-kā'shŭn), 1. Act or process of determining classification or nature of. 2. A sense of oneness, or psychic continuity with another person or group; one of the freudian defense mechanisms common to everyone, whereby anxiety regarding one's personal identity or worth is dissipated through the mechanism of perceiving oneself as having characteristics in common with a person in the public eye, or in childhood identifying with a more powerful person such as a parent. Synonym(s): incorporation [Mediev. L. identicus, fr. L. idem, the same, + facio, to make] incorporation Related to incorporation: articles of incorporationincorporationn. the act of incorporating an organization. (See: corporation, incorporate) incorporation the process of forming an association that has corporate personality. See CORPORATION.INCORPORATION. This term is frequently confounded, particularly in the old books, with corporation. The distinction between them is this, that by incorporation is understood the act by which a corporation is created; by corporation is meant the body thus created. Vide Corporation. INCORPORATION, civil law. The union of one domain to another. Incorporation
IncorporationA legal process through which a company receives a charter and the state in which it is based allows it to operate as a corporation.IncorporationThe process by which a business becomes a legal entity separate from its owner(s). Incorporation presents a number of advantages: becoming a separate legal entity means that the business itself makes or loses money, which protects owners from liability for its debts. Likewise, a corporation is taxed on its earnings separately from its owners, and, in many countries, the corporate tax rates are lower than personal tax rates. The process of incorporation involves writing articles of incorporation and registering them with the appropriate government entity in order to receive a corporate charter, which confers corporate legal status.Incorporation.When a business incorporates, it receives a state or federal charter to operate as a corporation. A corporation has a separate and distinct legal and tax identity from its owners. In fact, in legal terms, a corporation is considered an individual -- it can own property, earn income, pay taxes, incur liabilities, and be sued. Incorporating can offer many advantages to a business, among them limiting the liability of the company's owners. This means that shareholders are not personally responsible for the company's debts. Another advantage is the ability to issue shares of stock and sell bonds, both ways to raise additional capital. You know that a business is a corporation if it includes the word "Incorporated" -- or the short form, "Inc." -- in its official name. incorporation see COMPANY FORMATION.incorporation see COMPANY FORMATION.incorporation Related to incorporation: articles of incorporationSynonyms for incorporationnoun mergerSynonyms- merger
- federation
- blend
- integration
- unifying
- inclusion
- fusion
- absorption
- assimilation
- amalgamation
- coalescence
Synonyms for incorporationnoun consolidating two or more thingsRelated Wordsnoun learning (of values or attitudes etcSynonyms- internalisation
- internalization
Related Words- learning
- acquisition
- introjection
noun including by incorporatingRelated Words- inclusion
- annexation
- appropriation
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