释义 |
Definition of routinize in English: routinize(British routinise) verb ruːˈtiːnʌɪzˈrutnˌaɪz [with object]Make (something) into a matter of routine; subject to a routine. 使惯例化,使成常规;使成惯常 communication was routinized to ensure consistency of information 为保证信息的连贯,通讯已惯例化。 Example sentencesExamples - As production becomes rationalized and routinized over time, the skills and hence high wages of the city labor force become unnecessary.
- Can a search for the unknown be truly routinized?
- Troops often fired high or routinised their firing.
- Some of these women were given work assignments that were routinised, mundane and without power or responsibility.
- It is satisfying in a way that routinized, fill-the-hours work is not.
- Although normally spontaneous, there are periodic attempts to routinize it institutionally.
- In the end, the shuttle was supposed to ‘revolutionize transportation into near space, by routinizing it,’ in President Nixon's awkward phrase.
- Charisma is difficult to sustain and so tends to become routinized.
- Work will become routinized, and self-discovery will become a primary focus of activity.
- The expert also worried that the operation of the market economy was still not routinized in the city.
- Online advertising is riddled with complications and uncertainties which may take years to routinize.
- In the long run, office machines may have routinized clerical work, but in their early years, the skills demanded by the typewriter and adding machines were new and challenging.
- ‘It's very routinized, high-surveillance work,’ says Scarbrough of the Economic and Social Research Council.
- This article is therefore focused on one of the most routinised ceremonies ever performed during the Ancien Régime: the royal Mass.
- Gone are the days when work was standardized and routinized and performed by workers with narrow, specialist skills.
- It is becoming a routinised and highly regulated form of work where the creative space to work with clients has been squeezed.
- We see indications of this tendency in the perennial impulse to bureaucratize and routinize business practices.
- More typically, jobs in services are highly routinized, and are less secure and less well paid than even traditional industrial employment.
- In the 1820s, Charles G. Finney helped routinize revivals.
- It did not routinize access to power, but formed fields of autonomous units whose parameters and whose relations to each other were defined by a few political priorities.
Derivativesnoun ruːtiːnʌɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n The schedule of start times is essential to the routinisation of filmgoing. Example sentencesExamples - It also refers to the routinization of ways in which environmentalism is incorporated in a variety of social interactions.
- Its vast increase in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and its routinization in the eighteenth occurred in tandem with the growth of the state and the economy.
- Clearly distinguishing the weekend from the week suggests both a routinisation of time and a contrast between work time and leisure.
- Weber saw routinization and mechanization as ultimately destructive, that is, as eroding the spirit and capacity for spontaneous action.
Definition of routinize in US English: routinize(British routinise) verbˈrutnˌaɪzˈro͞otnˌīz [with object]usually be routinizedMake (something) into a matter of routine; subject to a routine. 使惯例化,使成常规;使成惯常 communication was routinized to ensure consistency of information 为保证信息的连贯,通讯已惯例化。 Example sentencesExamples - Gone are the days when work was standardized and routinized and performed by workers with narrow, specialist skills.
- More typically, jobs in services are highly routinized, and are less secure and less well paid than even traditional industrial employment.
- Although normally spontaneous, there are periodic attempts to routinize it institutionally.
- Online advertising is riddled with complications and uncertainties which may take years to routinize.
- It did not routinize access to power, but formed fields of autonomous units whose parameters and whose relations to each other were defined by a few political priorities.
- In the 1820s, Charles G. Finney helped routinize revivals.
- Work will become routinized, and self-discovery will become a primary focus of activity.
- It is satisfying in a way that routinized, fill-the-hours work is not.
- Can a search for the unknown be truly routinized?
- It is becoming a routinised and highly regulated form of work where the creative space to work with clients has been squeezed.
- In the long run, office machines may have routinized clerical work, but in their early years, the skills demanded by the typewriter and adding machines were new and challenging.
- Charisma is difficult to sustain and so tends to become routinized.
- Troops often fired high or routinised their firing.
- ‘It's very routinized, high-surveillance work,’ says Scarbrough of the Economic and Social Research Council.
- As production becomes rationalized and routinized over time, the skills and hence high wages of the city labor force become unnecessary.
- The expert also worried that the operation of the market economy was still not routinized in the city.
- In the end, the shuttle was supposed to ‘revolutionize transportation into near space, by routinizing it,’ in President Nixon's awkward phrase.
- This article is therefore focused on one of the most routinised ceremonies ever performed during the Ancien Régime: the royal Mass.
- Some of these women were given work assignments that were routinised, mundane and without power or responsibility.
- We see indications of this tendency in the perennial impulse to bureaucratize and routinize business practices.
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