释义 |
Definition of unionized in English: unionized(British unionised) adjective ˈjuːniənʌɪzdˈyo͞onyəˌnīzd (of workers or their workplace) belonging to, or having workers belonging to, a trade union. (工人或其工作场所)加入工会的;有工会组织的 有工会组织的工厂。 Example sentencesExamples - It is now mandatory for all unionized workplaces to post union de-certification procedures.
- The lesson for unions seeking to organise the unionised workplace is - ignore the supervisor at your peril.
- Historically they have been pretty much part of executive remuneration packages and have been more common in large public companies and in highly unionised workplaces.
- While that question does not depend, it seems to me, on whether the workplace is unionized, there is the further aspect in this case that the workplace is unionized pursuant to collective agreements with various unions including CUPE.
- This insight grew organically from the nature of the unionized workplace.
- Its 460,000 unionized factory workers and retirees still have a top-dollar medical plan, and no one gets laid off without getting most of their pay indefinitely.
- We've got some organisers who don't have such a portfolio but are responsible for organising in non-union and poorly unionised workplaces.
- One consequence of exclusive representation laws is that the more productive workers within a unionized workplace are usually made worse off by being legally prohibited from being paid higher than the general union scale.
- The construction workers were fully unionised, and union officers are to meet shortly with the contractors to discuss the lay-offs.
- The right is renewing its efforts to pass state and federal right-to-work laws that prohibit requiring employees in a unionized workplace to pay dues to unions.
- It is important to note that almost all blue-collar workers in unionized workplaces are union members in the South Korean auto industry.
- There are signs of solidarity action in unionised workplaces.
- A US garment factory where workers are unionized is not likely to be a sweatshop.
- On October 11, some 60,000 unionized grocery workers at 852 stores in southern California went on strike or were locked out of their jobs.
- To measure unionization, respondents were asked if they were personally a member of a union or if there were any unionized employees within their workplace.
- A third of the nation's 265,000 unionized hotel and restaurant workers have been laid off.
- The study found that supercenter wages are from $2.5 to $3.5 an hour lower than those of unionized grocery workers.
- The problems are compounded in Florida, one of twenty-two ‘right to work’ states, where union dues are not compulsory in unionized workplaces.
- Candidates for graduate issues officer were asked whether they would cross picket lines should unionised workers on campus go on strike.
- That's a question we will all be debating this year when contract negotiations open between unionized nurses and the government.
Definition of unionized in US English: unionized(British unionised) adjectiveˈyo͞onyəˌnīzd (of workers or their workplace) belonging to, or having workers belonging to, a labor union. (工人或其工作场所)加入工会的;有工会组织的 有工会组织的工厂。 Example sentencesExamples - It is now mandatory for all unionized workplaces to post union de-certification procedures.
- A US garment factory where workers are unionized is not likely to be a sweatshop.
- It is important to note that almost all blue-collar workers in unionized workplaces are union members in the South Korean auto industry.
- That's a question we will all be debating this year when contract negotiations open between unionized nurses and the government.
- The study found that supercenter wages are from $2.5 to $3.5 an hour lower than those of unionized grocery workers.
- On October 11, some 60,000 unionized grocery workers at 852 stores in southern California went on strike or were locked out of their jobs.
- The problems are compounded in Florida, one of twenty-two ‘right to work’ states, where union dues are not compulsory in unionized workplaces.
- The lesson for unions seeking to organise the unionised workplace is - ignore the supervisor at your peril.
- There are signs of solidarity action in unionised workplaces.
- To measure unionization, respondents were asked if they were personally a member of a union or if there were any unionized employees within their workplace.
- The right is renewing its efforts to pass state and federal right-to-work laws that prohibit requiring employees in a unionized workplace to pay dues to unions.
- Historically they have been pretty much part of executive remuneration packages and have been more common in large public companies and in highly unionised workplaces.
- This insight grew organically from the nature of the unionized workplace.
- While that question does not depend, it seems to me, on whether the workplace is unionized, there is the further aspect in this case that the workplace is unionized pursuant to collective agreements with various unions including CUPE.
- Candidates for graduate issues officer were asked whether they would cross picket lines should unionised workers on campus go on strike.
- We've got some organisers who don't have such a portfolio but are responsible for organising in non-union and poorly unionised workplaces.
- A third of the nation's 265,000 unionized hotel and restaurant workers have been laid off.
- One consequence of exclusive representation laws is that the more productive workers within a unionized workplace are usually made worse off by being legally prohibited from being paid higher than the general union scale.
- The construction workers were fully unionised, and union officers are to meet shortly with the contractors to discuss the lay-offs.
- Its 460,000 unionized factory workers and retirees still have a top-dollar medical plan, and no one gets laid off without getting most of their pay indefinitely.
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