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单词 organized
释义

organizedadj.

Brit. /ˈɔːɡənʌɪzd/, /ˈɔːɡn̩ʌɪzd/, U.S. /ˈɔrɡəˌnaɪzd/
Forms: see organize v. and -ed suffix1.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation; modelled on an Italian lexical item. Etymons: organize v., -ed suffix1.
Etymology: < organize v. + -ed suffix1. In quot. 1598 at sense 1 probably after Italian organizzato (1308); in quot. 1603 at sense 2 after French organisé (1595 in the passage translated).
1. Provided with organs; composed of parts connected and coordinated for vital functions or processes; living; organic.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > organism > [adjective]
organical1563
organized1598
organizate1647
organic1670
biological1896
the world > life > the body > system > [adjective] > organ > having
organed1586
organized1598
1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes Well proportioned, organised.
1642 H. More Ψυχωδια Platonica sig. F4v Here dare I not define't, th' Entelechy Of organized bodies.
1666 Philos. Trans. 1665–6 (Royal Soc.) 1 200 The Body of the Chick seems but a little Organized Gelly.
1733 G. Cheyne Eng. Malady i. x. 94 There may be Animalcula or Organised living Bodies of all Sizes.
1802 W. Paley Nat. Theol. xxiii. 452 Plants or animals, i.e. organized bodies, with parts bearing strict and evident relation to one another, and to the utility of the whole.
1866 H. E. Roscoe Lessons Elem. Chem. xxvii. 237 Such an organized structure is seen in the simple cell, the germ of living organisms.
1990 Jrnl. Exper. Bot. 41 905 Exposure to the inhibitor prevented the development of an organized photosynthetic membrane system.
2. Made to sound like an organ; (of a musical instrument) made in a manner resembling an organ.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > keyboard instrument > organ > [adjective]
organized1603
organal1611
organica1631
organistic1817
organed1834
1603 J. Florio tr. M. de Montaigne Ess. i. xx. 43 Tunable and organized ones [sc. farts].
1795 French & Amer. Gaz. 22 July He tunes..small large and organised spinnets.
1813 J. M. Good et al. Pantologia Organized Piano-forte, an instrument of modern invention, consisting of an organ and piano-forte, so conjoined that the same set of keys serve for both.
1889 A. J. Hipkins in G. Grove Dict. Music IV. 795 Two claviorgans or organized clavecins.
1980 Early Music 8 96/1 Haydn's ‘organized’ hurdy-gurdy which by the addition of organ pipes produced a typically haydenesque combination of flute and string sound.
3.
a. Formed into a structured whole; systematically ordered and arranged; having a formal organizational structure to arrange, coordinate, and carry out activities; spec. having formed into a union, political party, or similar body. Cf. organized labour n. at Compounds.In quot. 1645 perhaps an extension of sense 1 based on the metaphor of the church as a body.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > [adjective] > relating to organization > organized
organed1586
institutive1644
organized1645
structured1796
organic1817
1645 R. Baillie Dissuasive from Errours of Time ix. 182 They distinguish betwixt a Church Organized or Presbyterated, as they speake, and a Church inorganized and unpresbyterated... They would seeme to plead..for the power onely of an Organized and a Presbyterated Church.
1786 T. Jefferson Papers (1954) X. 48 It was improved into that of a regular association with an organised administration.
1817 Parl. Deb. 1st Ser. 357 Until it was necessary to meet the organized rebels in the field of battle.
1874 J. Morley On Compromise 32 All other organized priesthoods..move within formularies even more inelastic.
1900 Pilot 2 June 407/2 The absence of an organised and disciplined opposition is a very real danger.
1934 J. B. Priestley Eng. Journey iv. 71 This was not strictly mass production: there was no endless moving chain; there were no men restricted to putting on a bolt there, a nut here; it was highly organised large-scale jobbing production.
1957 Ann. Reg. 1956 23 A Labour spokesman..assured the Minister that organized workers were by no means wedded to a ‘Luddite’ philosophy.
1990 B. Bettelheim Recoll. & Refl. ii. 121 Religion in its organized form has lost its hold on many of us.
b. Of a person: having one's affairs in order so as to be able to deal with them efficiently. Frequently in to get (oneself) organized.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > undertaking > preparation > prepare or get ready [verb (intransitive)]
buskc1330
agraith1340
to make readya1382
arraya1387
providec1425
prepare1517
addressa1522
apparel1523
bouna1525
buckle1563
to make frecka1572
fettle?c1600
fix1716
to set into ——1825
to show foot1825
ready1878
to fang a pump, (loosely) a well1883
prep1900
to get (oneself) organized1926
to sharpen one's pencil1957
the world > action or operation > undertaking > preparation > [adjective] > prepared or ready
i-radc888
yarec888
i-redec1000
i-redya1175
boundc1175
graith?c1225
aready1250
alreadyc1275
readyc1275
armedc1300
prestc1300
bentc1330
ripec1330
purveyed1435
mature?1440
apt1474
habile1485
in (a) case to (also for)1523
provided1533
in procinct1540
weeping-ripe1548
furnished1553
fit1569
preta1600
expedite1604
predy1613
procinct1618
foreprepared1642
presto1644
apparated1663
(ready) in one's gears1664
fallow1850
standby1893
organized1926
(to be) all set1949
the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > [adjective] > skilful or adroit
hendc1275
happya1400
clean1485
habile1485
practivea1500
feat1519
well-handeda1529
handsome1542
trick1542
neat1571
dexterous1622
adroit1652
right-handeda1661
artful1663
nitle1673
ambidextrousa1682
clever1716
jemmy1751
slick1807
sleek1822
cleverish1826
featy1844
two-handed1861
nifty1889
mean1918
organized1926
ept1938
1926 W. Lewis Art of being Ruled vii. xi. 229 You can divide a person against himself, unless he is very well organized.
1948 E. Partridge et al. Dict. Forces' Slang 134 To get organized, to sort out one's ideas or possessions.
1976 ‘B. Shelby’ Great Pebble Affair 30 Officially, I had been renting my apartment for three months before I even saw it. That goes to show you how organized Donnely was.
1991 G. Burn Alma Cogan (1992) vi. 117 I was getting myself organised for the schlep across London to visit my mother.
c. slang. Acquired deviously, illicitly, or cleverly. Cf. organize v. 4. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > acquisition > [adjective] > obtained or acquired > by irregular means
crooked1864
cross1892
kinky1927
hot-stuffed1929
scrounged1941
organized1957
1957 H. Roosenburg Walls came tumbling Down v. 127 They had moved in..with a few organized mules and removed all the stores.
4. Of or relating to criminals or criminal activities arranged, coordinated, and carried out on a large or widespread scale. See also organized crime n. at Compounds.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > rule of law > lawlessness > [adjective] > relating to crime > organized
gangland1912
racketeering1928
organized1929
gangsterish1934
1929 J. Landesco Organized Crime in Chicago ix. 205 Newspaper writers,..interested in establishing the national and international ramifications of organized criminals.
1931 F. D. Pasley Muscling In iii. 94 Next to beer and booze, organized prostitution yielded the heaviest profits.
1989 B. Paris Louise Brooks i. vi. 123 The Eighteenth Amendment, which was subverted from the moment it went into effect in 1920, begat the bootlegger, the speakeasy, and the organized gangster.
2003 Pittsburgh Post-Gaz. (Nexis) 1 June b8 In tackling the topic of what he calls an organized criminal enterprise run by an ethnic group, Grow emphasizes that not all Gypsies are criminals.

Compounds

organized crime n. crime which is deliberately planned and not petty or opportunistic; spec. crime which is planned and controlled by powerful groups and carried out on a large scale; the groups who perpetrate this kind of crime.
ΚΠ
1867 G. S. Boutwell Speeches & Papers relating to Rebellion & Overthrow of Slavery 394 Who instituted arson as a plan, and finally closed their career of systematic and organized crime by the assassination of the President of the Republic.
1929 J. Landesco Organized Crime in Chicago ii. 25 Organized crime is not, as many think, a recent phenomenon in Chicago.
1973 Black Panther 5 May 2/2 It is widely known that Inman is himself a kingpin in the city's organized crime and racket rings, as is Atlanta Mayor Sam Massell.
1994 N.Y. Times 22 Nov. a6/3 There is a widespread feeling that organized crime has been quicker to take advantage of the post-cold-war order than either law enforcement agencies or conventional businesses.
organized games n. athletics or sports as organized in a school, college, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > [noun] > organized at school or college
game1846
organized games1857
1857 E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. 122 They [sc. Esquimaux] have definite traditions of the organized games and exercises by which this superiority [of prowess] used to be authenticated.
1933 D. L. Sayers Murder must Advertise xviii. 304 In Brotherhood's régime of bread and circuses, organised games naturally played a large part.
1974 Times 5 Jan. 10/3 At modern Oxbridge there has been a decline in the participation by undergraduates in organized games.
organized labour n. chiefly U.S. workers affiliated by membership in trade or labour unions.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > worker > those involved in labour relations > [noun] > members of trade or labour union
organized labour1848
1848 Edinburgh Rev. Oct. 537 The cry of ‘Poland’ had no better success than the cry of ‘organized labor’.
1948 Time 15 Mar. 27/2 He thought of himself as the leader of all the people, not just of organized labor.
1989 Philadelphia Inquirer 17 Dec. e7/3 The uncharacteristic split in organized labor between the building trades workers and the hotel workers union..was an intriguing subplot.
organized religion n. any structured system of faith or worship, esp. one followed by a large number of people, as Christianity, Islam, etc.; such religions collectively.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > religion > a religion or church > [noun]
churcheOE
kirkc1175
spousea1200
lawa1225
lorea1225
religionc1325
faithc1384
sectc1386
seta1387
leara1400
hirselc1480
professiona1513
congregation1526
communion1553
schism1555
segregation1563
sex1583
hortus conclususa1631
confessiona1641
dispensation1643
sectary1651
churchship1675
cult1679
persuasion1732
denomination1746–7
connection1753
covenant1818
sectarism1821
organized religion1843
1843 Church of Eng. Quarterly Rev. Jan. 4 Great men, vast intelligences arose, who purified and elaborated their former crude notions in a definite principle into a general and accepted, organized religion.
1946 P. Carter Last Objective in B. W. Aldiss & H. M. Harrison Decade 1940s (1975) 114 Organized religion had long since ceased to sanction war.
2001 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 26 Apr. 54/1 He was hostile to organized religion, which he considered oppression through the fetishization of words.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2004; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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adj.1598
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