unionize 的 2 个定义
un·ion·ized, un·ion·iz·ing.
- to form into a union.
- to organize into a labor union; bring into or incorporate in a labor union.
- to subject to the rules of a labor union.
un·ion·ized, un·ion·iz·ing.
- to form a union.
- to join in a labor union.
更多unionize例句
- In many states, particularly those where care workers haven’t been able to unionize and bargain for protections and better pay, there’s an ongoing labor shortage that only gets worse every year.
- They agreed in principle to teacher input, but they kept collective bargaining and the right to unionize out of legislation.
- They ultimately lost a vote that would have allowed the warehouse employees to unionize.
- Ford too has invested in a separate battery company, which may or may not be unionized one day.
- Sarah Jaffe writes that a failed vote to unionize Amazon workers at a facility in Alabama may be discouraging, but around the US, workers in the increasingly expansive tech sector are waking up to their power to organize, and to demand dignity.
- To date, the public at large does not support the efforts to unionize.
- Efforts to unionize are rare but not unheard of in the fast food industry.
- In the summer of 2005, the activists tried to unionize their Los Angeles office.
- A Dutch general got up and said, “The first thing you need to do is unionize your army.”
- In 1901 the United Hatters' Union practically ordered him to discharge his non-union men and unionize his factory.
- As soon as the troops go out, we fellows who have been working to unionize this region are going to catch it.
- They are engaged in a fight to unionize it and are as anxious to succeed as are the operators to prevent them from doing so.
- They are not on strike: they've been locked out by Frick, because he wants to non-unionize the works.