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organize

[awr-guh-nahyz] / ˈɔr gəˌnaɪz /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

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“I was able to organize my work better after I’d got my spiritual life organized,” she told one interviewer.

From The Wall Street Journal Jul. 17, 2026

Clients often hear financial planners talk in terms of designating different buckets of money to organize a portfolio.

From MarketWatch Jul. 13, 2026

That’s also true of agencies that guarantee safety of consumer products, that protect workers’ right to organize, that prohibit discrimination.

From Slate Jul. 6, 2026

We also found that Democrats and Republicans organize these campaign contributions differently.

From Salon Jul. 5, 2026

“Please. We're trying to organize, and Zayd’s making a bigger mess.”

From "Zara’s Rules for Record-Breaking Fun" by Hena Khan

Everlab’s platform ingests and organizes documents and data from doctors, specialists and pathologists, compiling patient records that it augments with real-time data from users’ existing wearable devices.

From The Wall Street Journal Jun. 16, 2026

For now, the overhaul represents a quiet but notable shift in how one of the country’s largest institutions organizes one of its most personal categories: belief.

From Salon Jun. 6, 2026

The author organizes shocks into three categories that will resonate with readers who have watched the world economy convulse in the past year.

From The Wall Street Journal Jun. 5, 2026

With his best friend, Diahann Carroll, and a sizable contribution from Sidney Poitier, Aaron organizes the funeral, attempting to redeem the reputation he was hired to protect.

From Los Angeles Times Jun. 1, 2026

“Your father’s Polish dictionary. The coded message saying he would be proud. And then she organizes the trip to Poland. A dangerous trip.”

From "The Bletchley Riddle" by Ruta Sepetys and Steve Sheinkin

Yamal’s family had entered a charity raffle organized by the Spanish newspaper Diario Sport and the United Nations Children’s Fund, known as UNICEF, and they won a spot in a promotional photo shoot with Messi.

From MarketWatch Jul. 17, 2026

Bayard Rustin, who organized the largest civil rights march in American history from the background as an openly gay man in 1963, and let other men stand at the microphone.

From Salon Jul. 15, 2026

In June 2023, she organized a star-studded auction to raise money for the British cancer research nonprofit the Brain Tumour Charity and raised the equivalent of about $93,500.

From Los Angeles Times Jul. 14, 2026

This was most evident when I attended a watch party his campaign organized for the World Cup at a Yemeni coffee shop.

From Slate Jul. 14, 2026

Georgia Militia—a militia organized under the British that fought the Union during the Civil War.

From "Music and the Child" by Natalie Sarrazin

“I wasn’t going to be able to do the organizing if we were married.”

From The Wall Street Journal Jul. 12, 2026

A presidential commission to determine how habitable buildings are has been organizing workshops to prepare engineers and architects to inspect buildings damaged by the earthquakes.

From Barron's Jul. 8, 2026

He had no experience in elected office, no notable history of activist organizing, no college degree, no significant success in the private sector, not even a record of pulling himself up by his proverbial bootstraps.

From Slate Jul. 8, 2026

But as her boyfriend reminded her while organizing her luggage: “Just because you’re packing doesn’t mean you’re leaving,” Liu recalled with a laugh.

From Los Angeles Times Jul. 2, 2026

Moss knew she was much better at organizing this sort of thing; he’d lost track of how many different clubs she had joined and/or been in charge of over at Piedmont High.

From "Anger Is a Gift" by Mark Oshiro




Vocabulary lists containing organize


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