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 institution [,insti'tju:ʃәn]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 机构, 惯例, 制度

[医] 机关, 机构, 设施




    institution
    [ noun ]
    1. an organization founded and united for a specific purpose

    2. <noun.group>
    3. an establishment consisting of a building or complex of buildings where an organization for the promotion of some cause is situated

    4. <noun.artifact>
    5. a custom that for a long time has been an important feature of some group or society

    6. <noun.cognition>
      the institution of marriage
      the institution of slavery
      he had become an institution in the theater
    7. the act of starting something for the first time; introducing something new

    8. <noun.act>
      she looked forward to her initiation as an adult
      the foundation of a new scientific society
    9. a hospital for mentally incompetent or unbalanced person

    10. <noun.artifact>


    Institution \In`sti*tu"tion\, n. [L. institutio: cf. F.
    institution.]
    1. The act or process of instituting; as:
    (a) Establishment; foundation; enactment; as, the
    institution of a school.

    The institution of God's law is described as
    being established by solemn injunction.
    --Hooker.
    (b) Instruction; education. [Obs.] --Bentley.
    (c) (Eccl. Law) The act or ceremony of investing a
    clergyman with the spiritual part of a benefice, by
    which the care of souls is committed to his charge.
    --Blackstone.

    2. That which instituted or established; as:
    (a) Established order, method, or custom; enactment;
    ordinance; permanent form of law or polity.

    The nature of our people,
    Our city's institutions. --Shak.
    (b) An established or organized society or corporation; an
    establishment, especially of a public character, or
    affecting a community; a foundation; as, a literary
    institution; a charitable institution; also, a
    building or the buildings occupied or used by such
    organization; as, the Smithsonian Institution.
    (c) Anything forming a characteristic and persistent
    feature in social or national life or habits.

    We ordered a lunch (the most delightful of
    English institutions, next to dinner) to be
    ready against our return. --Hawthorne.

    3. That which institutes or instructs; a textbook; a system
    of elements or rules; an institute. [Obs.]

    There is another manuscript, of above three hundred
    years old, . . . being an institution of physic.
    --Evelyn.

    1. Robert Falise, Irving's general counsel, said management views the Banca Commerciale offer as superior because, "We believe a partnership with a global financial institution makes much more sense than an acquisition by a domestic one."
    2. In 1962, the Sandlers packed up their belongings, drove to California and eventually bought Golden West, then a sleepy institution with $34 million of assets and two offices.
    3. Whitley told the Banking subcommittee that financial institution cases have overloaded the criminal justice system. A survey of FBI field offices showed more than 8,000 pending cases, half of them involving losses of $100,000 or more.
    4. St. Mary's, a sprawling 347-bed institution that sits across from an abandoned brass factory that will soon be razed, is just completing a $19 million expansion project.
    5. For New Yorkers, losing the Post's gossipy Page Six would be like losing an institution.
    6. The London School of Economics would like to move there from cramped premises on the other side of the river. Such a move would express confidence in a British institution of world renown.
    7. The first is that he intends the BBC to be a managed institution, rather than an agglomeration of committees and warring baronies.
    8. Under Spanish tax laws, ownership in excess of 90 per cent allows the parent institution to consolidate results. The disposal of the Acerinox interests is the first Banesto divestment to be managed by JP Morgan.
    9. At this institution we make a distinction between prophylactic mastectomy and mastectomy for risk reduction. Prophylactic mastectomy is a simple mastectomy that removes essentially all breast tissue and theoretically reduces the risk of cancer to zero.
    10. One of the State Department's most experienced Latin America hands is in line to become ambassador to the Organization of American States as part of an administration effort to revitalize that institution, according to U.S. officials.
    11. The action included a rare decision by the board to make straight payments rather than arranging a takeover by another institution.
    12. I want to be fair to myself, my family, my reputation, and I want to be fair to this institution that I've served for 34 years," the Texas Democrat told reporters.
    13. Some deals may involve co-investment with an institution, such as a regional venture capital fund, with the angel representing the co-investors on the board.
    14. If an institution decides it either doesn't need any more funds or could borrow elsewhere less expensively, it may allow maturing certificates to expire or not post new rates to attract new deposits.
    15. Earlier in the day, unidentified terrorists killed a night watchman and set off three bombs, destroying the interior of the biology lab building at the National University, an official at the institution said.
    16. The 12 thrifts will be merged into a new institution called American Federal Bank, based in Dallas.
    17. They seem to believe that what happened to Professors Holland and Wallen tarnishes Hampshire's claim to be an institution where the principles of academic freedom are revered.
    18. 'There was little incentive for a foreign financial institution to set up a branch in Madeira if it was going to be taxed on the earnings of that branch in its home country.
    19. Among the groups believed to have been involved were the Mafia, the notorious P2 masonic lodge and the Vatican, through its own financial institution.
    20. Mr. Bush's difficulties begin with the vice presidency, and his campaign coincides with a decline in support not only for the president but for the White House as an institution.
    21. BankAmerica Corp. outbid another California institution to buy MeraBank, a Phoenix-based thrift seized by the federal government, The Phoenix Gazette reported Wednesday.
    22. The University of Guanajuato, a prominent fine arts institution, supplied numerous student theater and musical performances throughout the festival.
    23. The government is examining $328,000 in political donations by the chairman of a failed Florida thrift, while a top regulator says the institution's failure could rival the $2.5 billion collapse of Lincoln Savings and Loan Association.
    24. Capital represents the interest of an institution's owners.
    25. The government is planning to privatise Rupali Bank, a medium-sized state-owned institution, later this year.
    26. Mr Lamont, his advisers and the Treasury as an institution have forfeited that trust.
    27. The BBC will make more programmes outside London, Mr John Birt, director-general, said yesterday. He told the Scottish Press Fund in Glasgow that the BBC had 'developed far too much as a London-based institution'.
    28. A single institution, Sun Belt Savings Association in Dallas, lost $1.2 billion.
    29. "I am totally flabbergasted," he said, adding that the report, carrying the weight of the institute and its parent National Institutes of Health, would almost certainly scare off any research institution or hospital from doing hyperthermia tests.
    30. Yet Harland continued to give upbeat briefings. On February 10, the day before the board met to agree on a profits warning, Mr Ashman met with one institution, John Govett.
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