(of a meeting or seminar) To manage or preside over
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To act in preparation for something
To arrange systematically
“Our first step is to organize the immense amount of documents we have in a logical order.”
(of an event or activity) To make arrangements or preparations for
“It took months of planning and preparation to organize the annual music festival.”
To bring (people) together for a common purpose or cause
“Blackett, the English physicist, was asked to organize a group of scientists to help put the newly invented radar system into use.”
To obtain, arrange, or achieve by indirect, complicated or intensive efforts
To assign to a particular class or category
To bring about or cause something to happen
To set up, establish or initiate (something)
To prepare something in advance
To arrange or organize a scheduled event
To regulate the speed or amount of something given or administered
To provide a social event as host or hostess
To cause two or more events to happen at the same time or rate
(of a meeting or seminar) To manage or preside over
To put on a public performance
To bring forward into existence or to introduce
To form into a group or groups
(computing) To manipulate data or information with a computer or software
To achieve through negotiation
To have or contain as part of a body, structure or system
(look to or look at) To hope for, or aspire to, a goal or dream
To command or call for something officially or by authority
To carry out spring-cleaning on (a room, a house, etc)
To modify, especially so as to better fit a given purpose or circumstance
To take or be in charge of a movement or endeavor
To move administration or power to a single, central authority
To simplify something (by removing the complexities from)
To combine individual or separate elements together
To unite in a federal union
To put or bring into effective use
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