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单词 institutionally
释义

Definition of institutionally in English:

institutionally

adverbˌɪnstɪˈtjuːʃ(ə)n(ə)liˌɪnstəˈt(j)uʃ(ə)n(ə)li
  • 1As or by an institution.

    institutionally sanctioned religious practices
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Governing activities are often executed by distinct boards, councils, or designated officials institutionally distinguished from those who manage.
    • In the past, the CIO has been institutionally separate.
    • Institutionally, the European Union has one seat in the WTO.
    • One reason that public libraries, parks, and land trusts serve the commons is because they are institutionally designed to serve everyone.
    • The new economists remain within the mainstream and do not form new schools of their own, institutionally isolated from more conventional departments.
    • The Russian Orthodox Church has always been institutionally powerful, even when functioning within strict limits.
    • The securities commission was institutionally too weak, and legal authority too dispersed, to inhibit questionable activities.
    • Institutionally, the academy was an arm of the depatment.
    • Among the unexamined assumptions in his book is that the abuse of children by immature, institutionally protected priests is something new.
    • Last year, the institutionally sober publication wrote a highly scathing article about CSR, pouring a large bucket of cold water over the trend.
    1. 1.1 As a convention or norm in an organization or culture.
      the report claimed the organization was institutionally racist
      a criminal justice system institutionally biased in favour of the offender
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Fascism differs from authoritarian conservatism institutionally.
      • This is an image fit for art taken seriously—which is to say, art defined institutionally—the art everyone knows is art.
      • The new millennium has prompted an onslaught of institutionally engineered revisionism.
      • The counterpart of this institutionally enriched ontological characterization is fundamental uncertainty with the possibility of some knowledge.
      • While we may not be medieval England, we remain a country in which violence is pervasive, learned early, and institutionally sponsored.
      • They are creating an environment institutionally detrimental to the creation and display of politicized artwork.
      • From theory we can extract impersonal, institutionally approved reasons for liking art.
      • Far from indicating "market failure," these are the natural frictions of economic life that are excluded from the institutionally barren world of neoclassical theory.
      • In a culture where politicians are misunderstood and institutionally disliked, politics generally suffers and bad government ensues.
      • His work asks important questions about the assumptions of institutionally approved culture, traditional historiographies of iconic places, and society in general.

Definition of institutionally in US English:

institutionally

adverbˌɪnstəˈt(j)uʃ(ə)n(ə)liˌinstəˈt(y)o͞oSH(ə)n(ə)lē
  • 1As or by an institution.

    institutionally sanctioned religious practices
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Last year, the institutionally sober publication wrote a highly scathing article about CSR, pouring a large bucket of cold water over the trend.
    • Institutionally, the European Union has one seat in the WTO.
    • The securities commission was institutionally too weak, and legal authority too dispersed, to inhibit questionable activities.
    • Governing activities are often executed by distinct boards, councils, or designated officials institutionally distinguished from those who manage.
    • One reason that public libraries, parks, and land trusts serve the commons is because they are institutionally designed to serve everyone.
    • Among the unexamined assumptions in his book is that the abuse of children by immature, institutionally protected priests is something new.
    • Institutionally, the academy was an arm of the depatment.
    • The new economists remain within the mainstream and do not form new schools of their own, institutionally isolated from more conventional departments.
    • The Russian Orthodox Church has always been institutionally powerful, even when functioning within strict limits.
    • In the past, the CIO has been institutionally separate.
    1. 1.1 As a convention or norm in an organization or culture.
      the report claimed the organization was institutionally racist
      a criminal justice system institutionally biased in favor of the offender
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The new millennium has prompted an onslaught of institutionally engineered revisionism.
      • Far from indicating "market failure," these are the natural frictions of economic life that are excluded from the institutionally barren world of neoclassical theory.
      • His work asks important questions about the assumptions of institutionally approved culture, traditional historiographies of iconic places, and society in general.
      • In a culture where politicians are misunderstood and institutionally disliked, politics generally suffers and bad government ensues.
      • Fascism differs from authoritarian conservatism institutionally.
      • The counterpart of this institutionally enriched ontological characterization is fundamental uncertainty with the possibility of some knowledge.
      • This is an image fit for art taken seriously—which is to say, art defined institutionally—the art everyone knows is art.
      • From theory we can extract impersonal, institutionally approved reasons for liking art.
      • They are creating an environment institutionally detrimental to the creation and display of politicized artwork.
      • While we may not be medieval England, we remain a country in which violence is pervasive, learned early, and institutionally sponsored.
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