organisational
Meaning: Relating to the way in which something is organised, structured, or managed; pertaining to an organisation or to the process of organising.
Organisational is a workhorse adjective in professional and academic contexts, describing anything related to how institutions, groups, or activities are structured and managed. 'Organisational change,' 'organisational culture,' and 'organisational behaviour' are standard terms in business studies. The American spelling is 'organizational.' Common collocations include 'organisational structure,' 'organisational skills,' 'organisational change,' and 'organisational culture.'
Examples
- The merger required a fundamental organisational restructuring that affected every department in the company. 此次合并需要从根本上进行组织重构,影响了公司的每一个部门。La fusión exigió una reestructuración organizativa fundamental que afectó a todos los departamentos de la empresa.合併には全部門に影響を及ぼす根本的な組織再編が必要とされた。합병에는 회사 내 모든 부서에 영향을 미치는 근본적인 조직 재편이 필요했다.
- Her exceptional organisational skills made her the obvious choice to coordinate the conference logistics. 她出色的组织能力使她成为协调会议后勤工作的不二人选。Sus excepcionales habilidades organizativas la convirtieron en la candidata idónea para coordinar la logística de la conferencia.彼女の卓越した組織力は、会議の運営を調整する役割にとって明白な適任者であった。그녀의 탁월한 조직력은 회의 물류를 조정할 적임자로서 그녀를 명백한 선택으로 만들었다.
- Research into organisational behaviour suggests that flat hierarchies can foster greater innovation and employee satisfaction. 对组织行为的研究表明,扁平化的层级结构可以促进更大的创新和员工满意度。La investigación en comportamiento organizativo sugiere que las jerarquías horizontales pueden fomentar una mayor innovación y satisfacción laboral.組織行動に関する研究は、フラットな階層構造がより大きなイノベーションと従業員満足度を促進しうることを示唆している。조직 행동에 관한 연구는 수평적 위계 구조가 더 큰 혁신과 직원 만족도를 촉진할 수 있음을 시사한다.
Pronunciation
Usage Guide
Context: professional, academic, journalism
Tone: neutral
Origin & History
From 'organisation' (British spelling), from French 'organisation,' from Medieval Latin 'organizare' (to furnish with organs, to arrange), from Latin 'organum' (instrument, organ). The adjective form entered English in the 19th century.
Cultural Context
Era: Modern
Generation: All ages
Social background: Universal
More From This Topic
More from General Advanced
Flashcards, quizzes, audio pronunciation & spaced repetition — all free