mobilise的意思和读音

mobilise

: ['məʊbəlaɪz] : ['məʊbəlaɪz]

v.

mobilisev.

1.[t][i]~ (sb)to work together in order to achieve a particular aim; to organize a group of people to do this

The unions mobilized thousands of workers in a protest against the cuts.

2.[t]~ sthto find and start to use sth that is needed for a particular purpose

They were unable to mobilize the resources they needed.

3.[t][i]~ (sb/sth)if a countrymobilizes its army, or if a country or armymobilizes , it makes itself ready to fight in a war

The troops were ordered to mobilize.

v.1.;

1. appease 使使 mobilise snub ...

2. ... 4.barely adv. , , 5.mobilise vt.vi. , , 6.credible adj. , ...

3. ... point out specifically mobilise to give in,soften one's stance ...

:,,,,,,

1.The party is an Islamic-rooted movement, and there is nothing Islamists do better than serve ordinary people and mobilise in times of need.

2.All along the frontier, German preparations for invasion were intensifying, but Soviet forces had not yet even begun to mobilise.沿

3.Among the messages to Zaobao Online's forum, quite a few were intended to mobilise people for another kind of political protest.

4.With its command economy, China is able to mobilise resources on a massive scale at speed.

5.If a country did not need to do so, it would not mobilise the SDR-based credit.

6.with the onset of sars , the force fleet and drivers were able to mobilise immediately in support of health authorities quarantine measures.

7.That is the only important thing at the moment - to mobilise our resources in every single game. That is where our future lies.

8.Its aim is to mobilise support for teachers and to ensure that the needs of future generations will continue to be met by teachers.

9.Meanwhile police chiefs must be readier to mobilise the extra officers whose deployment finally quelled the trouble last week.

10.Here we have an internal brace which prevents the tissues from stretching but still allows you to mobilise the joint with some confidence.