释义 |
Definition of coordination in English: coordinationnounkəʊˌɔːdɪˈneɪʃ(ə)nkoʊˌɔrdnˈeɪʃ(ə)n mass noun1The organization of the different elements of a complex body or activity so as to enable them to work together effectively. 协调;调和 an important managerial task is the control and coordination of activities Example sentencesExamples - Joint planning, management, and coordination of policy are essential.
- Complex activities requiring extensive coordination and control of large numbers of people have been accomplished throughout history, but there have not always been managers to do them.
- Plant adaptation to stress is mediated by multiple signalling pathways that allow the co-ordination of growth and primary assimilation processes in shoots and roots.
- The survey showed there was improvement in areas such as planning of school places and co-ordination of the admission process, which were disappointing last year.
- The results have implications for the design of high-stress work environments such as the coordination of fire-fighting operations.
- But once the coordination and holdout problems are overcome, much work has to be done to prevent massive abuses from working their way into the system.
- Other measures can also be implemented while a separate plan for organizing coordination can be drawn up.
- What the architect brings to the process is the co-ordination of the various design elements.
- Labour's health policy noted the adoption of a Youth Health Action Plan to ensure better co-ordination of policies and services addressing youth and pre-school health issues.
- The authors concluded that the coordination of estimating procedures using the available state and local government data could reduce the size of these discrepancies.
- One volunteer state coordinator is selected to manage communication and coordination of volunteer activities.
- He also will be involved in statewide coordination of precision agriculture activities.
- Initially the object was coordination with the activities of Indian National Congress in the struggle for freedom of the country.
- The centre is linked to all the municipalities in the district and co-ordination of activities will come from the centre, should disaster strike.
- She will be responsible for the flow of information between the marketing and sales departments and the coordination of marketing and training materials.
- The first level criticism of socialism is that private property in the means of production is a necessary condition for the coordination of economic activity.
- Previously director of engineering, Schultz will be responsible for the direction and coordination of all manufacturing activities.
- Therefore a discussion of the coordination of federal, state, and local law enforcement can only take place within those parameters.
- The Battalions have also taken the lead in the coordination of building new classrooms, offices, and other facilities with heavy reliance on temporary modular structures.
- The truly valuable European expertise is in the coordination and operation of multinational, hi-tech projects.
Synonyms organization, planning, plans, management, arrangement, administration, masterminding, direction, orchestration, regimentation, engineering, execution, handling, running - 1.1 Cooperative effort resulting in an effective relationship.
合作;协作 action groups work in coordination with local groups to end rainforest destruction 行动小组与地方组织合作以结束对热带雨林的破坏。 Example sentencesExamples - Another major goal is to get cooperation and coordination between ASNE and other journalism groups.
- Near-to-perfect coordination between clients, contractors and architects is maintained.
- Richman's call for coordination between national and local governments and his insistence that civil liberties must be protected in this process are both persuasive.
- This is the task undertaken by the United Nations Development Programme in coordination with the Government of India.
- ‘We applaud the efforts to improve co-ordination and co-operation,’ State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said.
- The teams and LRS operations staff in coordination with every unit involved in the operation participated in the rehearsals.
- Both surveys demonstrated room for improvement and need for coordination between medical partners.
- With many police forces only having a part-time computer crime unit there can be little effective coordination between forces.
- An atmosphere of mutual understanding, and coordination between both types of resistance should prevail.
- The essence, according to them, was better coordination between a manufacturer and its suppliers to eliminate unnecessary spending.
- We need some form of coordination between all parties involved in such events to ensure that the public is getting reasonable information in an understandable format.
- In this field, there has to be far greater cooperation and coordination between a whole range of actors and the development of a series of realistic joint projects.
- A bi-national state requires a minimum of cooperation and coordination between equal partners, an option that we do not have at this point in time.
- We're keeping a nearly round-the-clock watch on Kreigler and his top associates in coordination with the local authorities.
- Well, you know, they're independent and they're very well funded and there's no coordination between what the campaigns are doing and what these groups are doing.
- The coordination between Suffolk County and federal agents is relatively new.
- Each collective sortie should be used to train and develop teamwork and coordination between staffs.
- The inability of our MPs to put pressure on the Railway Minister and lack of coordination between the State Government and the Opposition have led to the present state of affairs.
- Use of the buildings, such as for social, tourism, education, science, culture, or religious purposes, must also be in coordination with the agency, she said.
- Because few things are more important than effective liaison and coordination between ours and our allies intelligence services.
Synonyms collaboration, working together, joint action, combined effort, teamwork, mutual support, partnership, coopetition, liaison, association, synergy, unity, concurrence, concord, accord, understanding, give and take, compromise
2The ability to use different parts of the body together smoothly and efficiently. (身体的)协调能力 changing from one foot position to another requires coordination and balance 单脚站立时换到另一只脚需要身体的协调和平衡。 Example sentencesExamples - It attacks toddlers' balance, co-ordination, speech and immune systems.
- At higher doses, other problems can include drowsiness, poor coordination, dizziness or double vision.
- We try to address many different goals through art lessons, including increased fine motor coordination, visual perception skills and the ability to follow directions.
- The car encourages children to combine imagination and muscle power with balance and co-ordination.
- It's no different from learning to ride a bike: Your dad first has to help stabilize you until you develop the coordination to do everything on your own.
- Swing-around requires little coordination, other than that players observe the tenet of never dribbling more than three times before they pick up and pass.
- Although this would not have caused death it could have impaired their attention, concentration, co-ordination and ability to make reasoned decisions.
- Being cold can also affect your dexterity, co-ordination and ability to think.
- Balance, gait, and motor coordination are also severely affected.
- Or, if you like, a great soccer player is someone who will have very good acceleration, good strength, good eye sight and good coordination.
- In addition to a headache, brain tumors almost always cause problems with coordination, balance, speech, sight, and walking.
- The youngsters undertake a wide range of activities as well as all sorts of tests and examinations, to find out about their hearing, sight, co-ordination, breathing and many other things.
- That would seem to require either perfect coordination of two fins of widely differing shape and size, or a trick that somehow imparts stability to the fish without slowing it down.
- It doesn't work with my voice recognition software, and it requires a level of co-ordination that many older or disabled people just won't have.
- For no apparent reason, the Dublin girl gradually lost her speech, power and co-ordination in front of her baffled and heartbroken family over the next 18 months.
- I realise computer games are supposed to improve hand-eye co-ordination and develop strategy and problem-solving ability.
- Because alcohol affects alertness, judgment, coordination, and reaction time, drinking increases the risk of falls and accidents.
- The classes will help improve coordination, self discipline and confidence.
- She hadn't the strength, nor the coordination to pull on the gloves with her joints being so stiff, so she breathed upon her palms and felt the warm air lightly burn her skin.
- It becomes apparent in early childhood as a difficulty in learning or when children are carrying out skills that require co-ordination.
3Chemistry The linking of atoms by coordinate bonds. 〔化〕(通过配价键的)络合;配位 Example sentencesExamples - For each shell water, approximately two coordination sites are replaced by glycerol molecules, leaving the overall coordination constant.
- In either case, the new structure represents an interesting and unique case of metal coordination in enzyme catalysis.
- The energy shift is a function of the mass of the involved atoms and the binding strength and coordination, so every chemical species shows its own, distinct fingerprint.
- This network of calcium coordination is observed to be stable with the two water molecules maintaining coordination with the calcium ion throughout the simulation period.
- But what about using the metal coordination of the DNA building blocks (or simple derivatives thereof) as a tool to construct new molecular architectures?
OriginMid 17th century (in the sense 'placing in the same rank'): from French or from late Latin coordinatio(n-), based on Latin ordo, ordin- 'order'. Definition of coordination in US English: coordinationnounkoʊˌɔrdnˈeɪʃ(ə)nkōˌôrdnˈāSH(ə)n 1The organization of the different elements of a complex body or activity so as to enable them to work together effectively. 协调;调和 both countries agreed to intensify efforts at economic policy coordination 两国同意在经济政策的协调上加强努力。 Example sentencesExamples - The authors concluded that the coordination of estimating procedures using the available state and local government data could reduce the size of these discrepancies.
- Plant adaptation to stress is mediated by multiple signalling pathways that allow the co-ordination of growth and primary assimilation processes in shoots and roots.
- Labour's health policy noted the adoption of a Youth Health Action Plan to ensure better co-ordination of policies and services addressing youth and pre-school health issues.
- The Battalions have also taken the lead in the coordination of building new classrooms, offices, and other facilities with heavy reliance on temporary modular structures.
- One volunteer state coordinator is selected to manage communication and coordination of volunteer activities.
- Previously director of engineering, Schultz will be responsible for the direction and coordination of all manufacturing activities.
- The survey showed there was improvement in areas such as planning of school places and co-ordination of the admission process, which were disappointing last year.
- Other measures can also be implemented while a separate plan for organizing coordination can be drawn up.
- But once the coordination and holdout problems are overcome, much work has to be done to prevent massive abuses from working their way into the system.
- What the architect brings to the process is the co-ordination of the various design elements.
- Joint planning, management, and coordination of policy are essential.
- She will be responsible for the flow of information between the marketing and sales departments and the coordination of marketing and training materials.
- Complex activities requiring extensive coordination and control of large numbers of people have been accomplished throughout history, but there have not always been managers to do them.
- He also will be involved in statewide coordination of precision agriculture activities.
- Initially the object was coordination with the activities of Indian National Congress in the struggle for freedom of the country.
- Therefore a discussion of the coordination of federal, state, and local law enforcement can only take place within those parameters.
- The first level criticism of socialism is that private property in the means of production is a necessary condition for the coordination of economic activity.
- The truly valuable European expertise is in the coordination and operation of multinational, hi-tech projects.
- The results have implications for the design of high-stress work environments such as the coordination of fire-fighting operations.
- The centre is linked to all the municipalities in the district and co-ordination of activities will come from the centre, should disaster strike.
Synonyms organization, planning, plans, management, arrangement, administration, masterminding, direction, orchestration, regimentation, engineering, execution, handling, running - 1.1 Cooperative effort resulting in an effective relationship.
合作;协作 action groups work in coordination with local groups to end rainforest destruction 行动小组与地方组织合作以结束对热带雨林的破坏。 Example sentencesExamples - Each collective sortie should be used to train and develop teamwork and coordination between staffs.
- Another major goal is to get cooperation and coordination between ASNE and other journalism groups.
- Use of the buildings, such as for social, tourism, education, science, culture, or religious purposes, must also be in coordination with the agency, she said.
- The essence, according to them, was better coordination between a manufacturer and its suppliers to eliminate unnecessary spending.
- An atmosphere of mutual understanding, and coordination between both types of resistance should prevail.
- With many police forces only having a part-time computer crime unit there can be little effective coordination between forces.
- We need some form of coordination between all parties involved in such events to ensure that the public is getting reasonable information in an understandable format.
- This is the task undertaken by the United Nations Development Programme in coordination with the Government of India.
- A bi-national state requires a minimum of cooperation and coordination between equal partners, an option that we do not have at this point in time.
- Because few things are more important than effective liaison and coordination between ours and our allies intelligence services.
- Near-to-perfect coordination between clients, contractors and architects is maintained.
- In this field, there has to be far greater cooperation and coordination between a whole range of actors and the development of a series of realistic joint projects.
- Richman's call for coordination between national and local governments and his insistence that civil liberties must be protected in this process are both persuasive.
- The inability of our MPs to put pressure on the Railway Minister and lack of coordination between the State Government and the Opposition have led to the present state of affairs.
- We're keeping a nearly round-the-clock watch on Kreigler and his top associates in coordination with the local authorities.
- The coordination between Suffolk County and federal agents is relatively new.
- The teams and LRS operations staff in coordination with every unit involved in the operation participated in the rehearsals.
- Well, you know, they're independent and they're very well funded and there's no coordination between what the campaigns are doing and what these groups are doing.
- ‘We applaud the efforts to improve co-ordination and co-operation,’ State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said.
- Both surveys demonstrated room for improvement and need for coordination between medical partners.
Synonyms collaboration, working together, joint action, combined effort, teamwork, mutual support, partnership, coopetition, liaison, association, synergy, unity, concurrence, concord, accord, understanding, give and take, compromise
2The ability to use different parts of the body together smoothly and efficiently. (身体的)协调能力 changing from one foot position to another requires coordination and balance 单脚站立时换到另一只脚需要身体的协调和平衡。 Example sentencesExamples - We try to address many different goals through art lessons, including increased fine motor coordination, visual perception skills and the ability to follow directions.
- It becomes apparent in early childhood as a difficulty in learning or when children are carrying out skills that require co-ordination.
- The classes will help improve coordination, self discipline and confidence.
- In addition to a headache, brain tumors almost always cause problems with coordination, balance, speech, sight, and walking.
- The youngsters undertake a wide range of activities as well as all sorts of tests and examinations, to find out about their hearing, sight, co-ordination, breathing and many other things.
- At higher doses, other problems can include drowsiness, poor coordination, dizziness or double vision.
- It's no different from learning to ride a bike: Your dad first has to help stabilize you until you develop the coordination to do everything on your own.
- I realise computer games are supposed to improve hand-eye co-ordination and develop strategy and problem-solving ability.
- Balance, gait, and motor coordination are also severely affected.
- The car encourages children to combine imagination and muscle power with balance and co-ordination.
- Because alcohol affects alertness, judgment, coordination, and reaction time, drinking increases the risk of falls and accidents.
- That would seem to require either perfect coordination of two fins of widely differing shape and size, or a trick that somehow imparts stability to the fish without slowing it down.
- She hadn't the strength, nor the coordination to pull on the gloves with her joints being so stiff, so she breathed upon her palms and felt the warm air lightly burn her skin.
- Swing-around requires little coordination, other than that players observe the tenet of never dribbling more than three times before they pick up and pass.
- Although this would not have caused death it could have impaired their attention, concentration, co-ordination and ability to make reasoned decisions.
- It doesn't work with my voice recognition software, and it requires a level of co-ordination that many older or disabled people just won't have.
- For no apparent reason, the Dublin girl gradually lost her speech, power and co-ordination in front of her baffled and heartbroken family over the next 18 months.
- Or, if you like, a great soccer player is someone who will have very good acceleration, good strength, good eye sight and good coordination.
- It attacks toddlers' balance, co-ordination, speech and immune systems.
- Being cold can also affect your dexterity, co-ordination and ability to think.
3Chemistry The linking of atoms by coordinate bonds. 〔化〕(通过配价键的)络合;配位 Example sentencesExamples - But what about using the metal coordination of the DNA building blocks (or simple derivatives thereof) as a tool to construct new molecular architectures?
- In either case, the new structure represents an interesting and unique case of metal coordination in enzyme catalysis.
- The energy shift is a function of the mass of the involved atoms and the binding strength and coordination, so every chemical species shows its own, distinct fingerprint.
- For each shell water, approximately two coordination sites are replaced by glycerol molecules, leaving the overall coordination constant.
- This network of calcium coordination is observed to be stable with the two water molecules maintaining coordination with the calcium ion throughout the simulation period.
OriginMid 17th century (in the sense ‘placing in the same rank’): from French or from late Latin coordinatio(n-), based on Latin ordo, ordin- ‘order’. |