institution - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English institucioun, from Old French institution, from Latin institūtiō, from instituō (“to set up”), from in- (“in, on”) + statuō (“to set up, establish”). Equivalent to institute + -ion.
- (Received Pronunciation)
- (yod-coalescence) IPA(key): /ˌɪn.stɪˈtʃuː.ʃən/
- (non-yod-coalescence) IPA(key): /ˌɪn.stɪˈtjuː.ʃən/
- (General American, Canada) IPA(key): /ˌɪn.stɪˈtu.ʃən/
- (General Australian) IPA(key): /ˌɪn.stɪˈtjʉː.ʃən/
institution (countable and uncountable, plural institutions)
- A custom or practice of a society or community.
The institution of marriage is present in many cultures but its details vary widely across them.- 1934, Ernest Bramah, The Bravo of London:
To the cynical observation that speech is given us to conceal our thoughts it might be added that eating and drinking enable us to hide our feelings. I think that is why food is an institution almost whenever human beings have anything to say to one another.
- 1934, Ernest Bramah, The Bravo of London:
- A long-established organization or type of organization, particularly one involved with education, public service, or charity work.
- 1922, Annual Meeting[1], volume 55, Maryland State Teachers' Association, page 67:
[…] these professors of Little Red Schoolhouse-education did not themselves remain in the isolated and handicapped little institution they glorify. - 2009, T. J. English, Paddy Whacked: The Untold Story of the Irish American Gangster[2]:
It is a common misconception […] that the American Mob began as an Italian institution transplanted directly from Sicily. - 2011, Jay P. Dolan, The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present, page 181:
As both a social and a religious institution, the parish provided "the support and help" that the immigrants needed in the New World. - 2016, William Handwerker, Jayne A. Pearl, Nathan's Famous: An Unauthorized View of America's Favorite Frankfurter Company, page 52:
It was Murray's determination that finally motivated Nathan to agree to purchase the restaurant and convert it to the Coney Island-named institution, Nathan's Famous. - 2018, Steven Pinker, “Chapter 3: Counter-Enlightenments”, in Enlightenment Now: The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress, Penguin, →ISBN:
Who could be against reason, science, humanism, or progress? The words seem saccharine, the ideals unexceptionable. They define the missions of all the institutions of modernity—schools, hospitals, charities, news agencies, democratic governments, international organizations. Do these ideals really need a defense? They absolutely do. Since the 1960s, trust in the institutions of modernity has sunk, and the second decade of the 21st century saw the rise of populist movements that blatantly repudiate the ideals of the Enlightenment.
- 1922, Annual Meeting[1], volume 55, Maryland State Teachers' Association, page 67:
- The building or buildings which house such an organization.
He's been in an institution since the crash. - (informal) A mental institution.
- Any facility where people (especially those who are mentally or physically disabled or sick, or who are prisoners) are committed (confined), where their freedom to leave is restricted.
- (informal) Any long established and respected place or business.
Over time, the local pub has become something of an institution.- 2009 February 19, Gareth Lewis, “Giles Coren slams Winchester pub The Wykeham Arms”, in Southern Daily Echo[3]:
[quoting Giles Coren] "The Wykeham Arms [a pub] is destroyed. They have turned a great old English institution into a shameful clip-joint. It's a shuddering, howling tragedy."
- 2009 February 19, Gareth Lewis, “Giles Coren slams Winchester pub The Wykeham Arms”, in Southern Daily Echo[3]:
- (informal) A person long established in a place, position, or field.
She's not just any old scholar; she is an institution. - The act of instituting something.
The institution of higher speed limits was a popular move but increased the severity of crashes.- 1894, James George Frazer, The Golden Bough[4]:
Accordingly if we can show that a barbarous custom, like that of the priesthood of Nemi, has existed elsewhere; if we can detect the motives which led to its institution; if we can prove that these motives have operated widely, perhaps universally, in human society...
- 1894, James George Frazer, The Golden Bough[4]:
- (Christianity) The act by which a bishop commits a cure of souls to a priest. (Can we clean up(+) this sense?)
- (obsolete) That which institutes or instructs, particularly a textbook or system of elements or rules.
- (informal) A correctional institution.
established organisation
Albanian: institucion (sq) m
Arabic: مُؤَسَّسَة (ar) f (muʔassasa)
Armenian: հաստատություն (hy) (hastatutʻyun), հիմնում (hy) (himnum), ինստիտուտ (hy) (institut)
Belarusian: устано́ва (be) f (ustanóva), арганіза́цыя f (arhanizácyja), iнстыту́цыя f (instytúcyja)
Bulgarian: учрежде́ние (bg) n (učreždénie), институ́ция f (institúcija), организа́ция (bg) f (organizácija)
Catalan: institució (ca) f
Chinese:
Mandarin: 機關 / 机关 (zh) (jīguān), 機構 / 机构 (zh) (jīgòu)Danish: institution c
Dutch: instelling (nl)
Esperanto: institucio
Finnish: instituutio (fi), laitos (fi), toimielin (fi) (political institution)
French: institution (fr) f
Galician: institución (gl)
German: Institution (de) f
Icelandic: stofnun f
Italian: istituzione (it)
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: دەزگا (dezga)Lao: ສະຖາບັນ (sa thā ban)
Latvian: iestāde f
Macedonian: институција f (institucija), установа f (ustanova)
Māori: whareako
Norwegian:
Bokmål: institusjon (no) mPersian:
Iranian Persian: سازْمان (sâzmân), مُؤَسِّسِه (mo'assese), اِدارِه (edâre)Polish: instytucja (pl) f
Portuguese: instituição (pt) f
Romanian: instituție (ro) f
Russian: учрежде́ние (ru) n (učreždénije), заведе́ние (ru) n (zavedénije), организа́ция (ru) f (organizácija), ве́домство (ru) n (védomstvo), институ́ция (ru) f (institúcija)
Scottish Gaelic: stèidheachadh m
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: институ́ција f
Latin: institúcija (sh) fSikkimese: ཉམ་ཞིབ་ཁང (nyam zhib khang)
Slovak: inštitúcia f
Slovene: institucija f
Spanish: institución (es) f
Tagalog: tatagin
Tajik: муассиса (tg) (muassisa), идора (tg) (idora), ташкилот (taškilot)
Turkish: müessese (tr), kuruluş (tr), kurum (tr)
Ottoman Turkish: قوروم (kurum)Ukrainian: устано́ва (uk) f (ustanóva), за́клад m (základ), організа́ція (uk) f (orhanizácija), інститу́ція f (instytúcija)
Urdu: اِدارَہ m (idāra)
“institution”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
institution in Keywords for Today: A 21st Century Vocabulary, edited by The Keywords Project, Colin MacCabe, Holly Yanacek, 2018.
Raymond Williams (1983), “Institution”, in Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society, revised American edition, New York, N.Y.: Oxford University Press, published 1985, →ISBN, page 168.
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1911), “institution”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.
“institution”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
From Latin īnstitūtiō.
institution c (singular definite institutionen, plural indefinite institutioner)
From Latin īnstitūtiōnem.
institution f (plural institutions)
- “institution”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012
From Latin īnstitūtiō.
institution c
- an institution (an established organization)
- an institution (a habit)
- an institution (a person)
- a department (at a university)
datavetenskapliga institutionen
department of computer science
institutionen för fysik
department of physics
- instituera
- institut
- institutionalisera
- institutionell
- kulturinstitution
- “institution”, in Svensk ordbok [Dictionary of Swedish] (in Swedish)