unionize / ˈyun yəˌnaɪz /

📖毕业后词汇入会组建工会加入工会成立工会

unionize2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

un·ion·ized, un·ion·iz·ing.

  1. to form into a union.
  2. to organize into a labor union; bring into or incorporate in a labor union.
  3. to subject to the rules of a labor union.
v. 无主动词 verb

un·ion·ized, un·ion·iz·ing.

  1. to form a union.
  2. to join in a labor union.

更多unionize例句

  1. 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.
  2. They agreed in principle to teacher input, but they kept collective bargaining and the right to unionize out of legislation.
  3. They ultimately lost a vote that would have allowed the warehouse employees to unionize.
  4. Ford too has invested in a separate battery company, which may or may not be unionized one day.
  5. 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.
  6. To date, the public at large does not support the efforts to unionize.
  7. Efforts to unionize are rare but not unheard of in the fast food industry.
  8. In the summer of 2005, the activists tried to unionize their Los Angeles office.
  9. A Dutch general got up and said, “The first thing you need to do is unionize your army.”
  10. In 1901 the United Hatters' Union practically ordered him to discharge his non-union men and unionize his factory.
  11. As soon as the troops go out, we fellows who have been working to unionize this region are going to catch it.
  12. 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.
  13. They are not on strike: they've been locked out by Frick, because he wants to non-unionize the works.