释义 |
planification,, n. orig. U.S.|ˌplænɪfɪˈkeɪʃ(ə)n| [a. Fr., f. planifier to plan: see -fication.] Systematic planning or organization; the management of resources according to a plan, esp. of economic or political development; an instance of this.
1959New Yorker 22 Aug. 72/2 The city..radiates a sense of ‘good government’,..through the planification of its surrounding hills and slopes, marked off by dark cypresses, measured by yellow villas. 1962Economist 8 Dec. 1042/3 M. Robert Marjolin..finally came out, at a conference in Rome, and used the word planification. 1964Guardian 1 Apr. 14/3 France is still a capital importer and closed to foreign issues, and the ‘planification’ of credits is also an obstacle to a more liberal capital market. 1976Maclean's Mag. 1 Nov. 14/1 His government of technocrats and bureaucrats..have been frustrated to the screaming point by their planifications. 1976Aviation Week 22 Nov. 70/2 There is an interesting planification in the Soviet Union in order to pursue a vigorous utilization of the space dimension. 1982Financial Times 15 Jan. 19/8 The Fund must..not emerge as an engine of international planification. |