Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- Capable of being organized; susceptible of organization. Also spelled
organisable .
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- adjective Capable of being organized; esp. (Biol.), capable of being formed into living tissue.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Able to be
organized
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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"I think GM is eminently re-organizable," said Durc Savini, managing director at Miller Buckfire & Co., a New York investment banking firm that advised on the bankruptcies at auto suppliers Dana Corp. and Dura Automotive Inc.
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The paralytic effect of Obamamania threatens to finally strangle Black activism - and organizable Black consciousness, itself - on the eve of domestic and global catastrophe.
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Obama's campaign had the foresight to run up the delegate count in the organizable caucus states, betting on the fact that Clinton would not compete there.
Archive 2008-03-01 Stephen Retherford 2008
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Obama is cut from the same cloth as a man who organized the un-organizable.
Richard Montoya: Watch Latina Women Raise their Voice for Obama 2008
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They chose to use a wiki format because it's easy to add content from anywhere, there is more room for content and "nuggets" (annotations), it's searchable and organizable by categories, and (whoo-pah!) it has a huge potential for building community with the site's users.
October 2006 2006
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They chose to use a wiki format because it's easy to add content from anywhere, there is more room for content and "nuggets" (annotations), it's searchable and organizable by categories, and (whoo-pah!) it has a huge potential for building community with the site's users.
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The neocons recognized 30 years ago that the extremist fundy base was readily organizable and extremely motivated.
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Otherwise the concept of organization in which the un-organized and un-organizable (lawless) would be defined as constitutive of organization rather than placed outside of it may appear paradoxical (in the end, it is not), rather than only entailing an epistemology that is complex and difficult, and indeed for many impossible to accept.
Chaosmic Orders: Nonclassical Physics, Allegory, and the Epistemology of Blake's Minute Particulars. 2001
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But then it may also be the only available (or even the only possible) model of the configuration of the organizable and unformalizable just defined.
Chaosmic Orders: Nonclassical Physics, Allegory, and the Epistemology of Blake's Minute Particulars. 2001
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This stratum puzzles the traditional left, since it is plainly not being absorbed by any spontaneous historic process into a classical "proletariat": it is not organizable by the familiar methods of, e.g., labor unions or held together by some ideology of class consciousness like Marxism.
A Special Supplement: Chile: Year One Hobsbawm, E.J. 1971
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