A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia
A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia

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organize.html -


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New English :: organic
organize.html - adjective (Environment) (Lifestyle and Leisure) Of food: produced without the use of chemical fertilizers, pesticides, etc., by adding only organic material to the soil. Etymology: Organic in this sense was originally applied to the fertilizers themselves , signifying that they were derived from living matter, unlike the inorganic chemical fertilizers. The adjective was then applied to the method of farming in which organic fertilizers were used (from about the early forties onwards), and finally to the produce of this method of farming. A term such as organic vegetables therefore represents two stages of abbreviation from the more accurate but impossibly cumbersome vegetables grown using a method of agriculture employing only organic materials. Such vegetables are organic in the sense that they contain no traces of the inorganic chemicals often used in vegetable production, but the term organic vegetables rightly strikes some people as a tautology, since all living things are organic. History and Usage: Organic was first applied to the produce of organic farming methods in the seventies, when environmental concerns began to gain a place in the public consciousness. However, organic produce was considerably more expensive than that produced by modern methods and for some time it was considered to be the province of health-food freaks ( an attitude which had prevailed in developed countries when organic farming was first tried in the forties as well). However, demand for organic produce grew markedly in the eighties, as did awareness of the meaning of the term; this was largely because of the success of the green movement and growing public concern about the potentially harmful effects of agricultural chemicals (fed by such scares as the one over Alar in apples). By the end of the eighties organically grown fruit and vegetables were regularly on sale alongside those produced by mainstream farming techniques, and it was even possible to buy organic meat (that is , meat from animals that had been fed only on organic produce). High-tech greens who like the way microwaves cook their organic veg could find the new foodprobe...worth investigating. Practical Health Spring 1990, p.
9 More recently, the desire for organically grown, pesticide-free produce has created a new kind of city garden where food plants are mixed with flowers. Garbage Nov.-Dec. 1990, p. 36
New English :: organizer
organize.html - noun
(Lifestyle and Leisure ) Something which helps a person to organize (objects, appointments, papers, etc.); a container which is arranged in sections or compartments so as to make systematic organization of the contents easier. Etymology: A sense shift involving abbreviation of a longer phrase; an organizer would normally be a person who organizes, but here it is the object which helps a person to organize, that is, a product for the organizer. No doubt the manufacturers of these products would be happy for organizer in this sense still to be interpreted as though the organization were done for its owner by the product, but as Stephanie Winston has pointed out in her book Getting Organized (1978): You're bound to be disappointed if you buy lots of boxes, containers, and 'organizers' in the wistful hope that they will somehow make you organized. They won't. History and Usage: Products described as organizers (often with a preceding word describing the thing to be organized, as, for example, desk organizer) started to appear on the market in the late sixties. The fashion for organizers in the office was followed in the late seventies by the idea of the organizer bag, a handbag with many different compartments and pockets. In the eighties, when getting organized was synonymous with getting on, organizer was often used as a short form for personal organizer, the generic term for sectioned notebooks like the Filofax which became so fashionable in the early eighties for organizing one's life. Perhaps trying to jump on the bandwagon, advertisers tended to overwork the word organizer in the mid and late eighties: any piece of furniture with shelves or compartments, or even a simple box file was enthusiastically transformed into an essential organizer by the copywriters. The word organizer is often used attributively in naming these products (following the model of organizer bag), in organizer unit etc. Our gift to you--an organizer unit to store your player and discs. New Yorker 4 June 1984, p.
1 It has one shelf and two small plastic 'organisers' to hold all your baby's toiletries. Practical Parenting Apr. 1988, p.
8 The desk-sized professional organizer now makes up 10 per cent of sales, and a small pocket organizer has been launched. The Times 7 Apr. 1989, p. 25
Traditional English :: organic
organize.html - adj.
1 a Physiol. of or relating to a bodily organ or organs. b Med. (of a disease) affecting the structure of an organ.
2 (of a plant or animal) having organs or an organized physical structure.
3 Agriculture produced or involving production without the use of chemical fertilizers, pesticides, etc. (organic crop; organic farming).
4 Chem. (of a compound etc.) containing carbon (opp. INORGANIC).
5 a structural, inherent. b constitutional, fundamental.
6 organized, systematic, coordinated (an organic whole).
    organic chemistry the chemistry of carbon compounds. organic law a law stating the formal constitution of a country.
    organically adv. [F organique f. L organicus f. Gk organikos (as ORGAN)]
Traditional English :: organism
organize.html - n.
1 a living individual consisting of a single cell or of a group of interdependent parts sharing the life processes.
2 a an individual live plant or animal. b the material structure of this.
3 a whole with interdependent parts compared to a living being. [F organisme (as ORGANIZE)]
Traditional English :: organist
organize.html - n.
the player of an organ.
Traditional English :: organization
organize.html - n.
(also -isation)
1 the act or an instance of organizing; the state of being organized.
2 an organized body, esp. a business, government department, charity, etc.
3 systematic arrangement; tidiness.
    organization man a man who subordinates his individuality and his personal life to the organization he serves.
    organizational adj. organizationally adv.
organize.html -