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Institution Mental People System Noun Bre ˌɪnstɪˈtjuːʃn ˌɪnstɪˈtuːʃn

Word institution
WordType (noun)
Phonetic BrE / ˌɪnstɪˈtjuːʃn / NAmE / ˌɪnstɪˈtuːʃn /
Example
  • an educational/financial, etc. institution
  • the smithsonian institution
  • a mental institution
  • we want this to be like a home, not an institution.
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Content

institution

(noun)BrE / ˌɪnstɪˈtjuːʃn / NAmE / ˌɪnstɪˈtuːʃn /
  1. a large important organization that has a particular purpose, for example, a university or bank
    • an educational/financial, etc. institution
    • the Smithsonian Institution
  2. a building where people with special needs are taken care of, for example because they are old or mentally ill
    • a mental institution
    • We want this to be like a home, not an institution.
  3. a custom or system that has existed for a long time among a particular group of people
    • the institution of marriage
  4. the act of starting or introducing something such as a system or a law
    • the institution of new safety procedures
  5. a person who is well known because they have been in a particular place or job for a long time
    • You must know him—he's an institution around here!

    Extra Examples

    • American laws once protected the institution of slavery.
    • Fish and chips became a national institution in Britain.
    • Football is a national institution in this country.
    • He claimed this threatened ‘the sacred institution of marriage’.
    • He was released from the state institution where he had been confined for four years.
    • Many people with dementia would rather remain at home than be placed in an institution.
    • Parliament remains the central institution of the constitution of the United Kingdom.
    • The College is one of the most prestigious medical institutions in the country.
    • The state built institutions for those who were considered insane.
    • These changes threaten some of our most cherished institutions.
    • These values are embedded in mainstream social institutions.
    • They are studying ways to reform government institutions.
    • They argue for the reform of existing political institutions.
    • We need to create institutions that benefit our community.
    • a course at an institution of higher education
    • an institution for mentally ill offenders
    • cultural institutions such as religious and legal codes
    • cultural institutions such as the Danish Institute
    • examination procedures within educational institutions
    • patients in mental institutions
    • the central institutions of the nation’s constitution
    • young people who attend higher-education institutions
    • The deal is backed by one of the country’s largest financial institutions.
    • The system is targeted mainly at academic and research institutions.
    • They had him committed to a mental institution.

    Word Origin

    • late Middle English (in senses (3) and (4)): via Old French from Latin institutio(n-), from the verb instituere, from in- ‘in, towards’ + statuere ‘set up’. Sense (1) dates from the early 18th cent.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

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