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Definition of Standardisation
1. Noun. The condition in which a standard has been successfully established. "Standardization of nuts and bolts had saved industry millions of dollars"
2. Noun. The imposition of standards or regulations. "A committee was appointed to recommend terminological standardization"
Generic synonyms: Social Control
Specialized synonyms: Stabilisation, Stabilization, Stylisation, Stylization
Derivative terms: Normalise, Normalize, Standardise, Standardize
3. Noun. The act of checking or adjusting (by comparison with a standard) the accuracy of a measuring instrument. "The thermometer needed calibration"
Generic synonyms: Activity
Specialized synonyms: Tuning, Adjustment, Readjustment, Registration
Derivative terms: Calibrate, Calibrate, Standardise, Standardize
Definition of Standardisation
1. Noun. (alternative spelling of standardization) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Standardisation
Literary usage of Standardisation
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society by Cambridge Philosophical Society (1900)
"By WALTER MYERS, MA; John Lucas Walker Student in the University of Cambridge.
[Read 7 if ay 1900.] THE Standardisation of ..."
2. American Business in World Markets: Our Opportunities and Obligations in by James T.M. Moore (1919)
"Standardisation OF the lessons for industry which the war has taught, one has to
do with standardisation, a word now in considerable vogue and in connection ..."
3. Regulatory Reform in Hungary by Oecd (2000)
"First, European standardisation and certification bodies need to have a high ...
The policy framework for standardisation activities is laid down in Law ..."
4. Quantitative Chemical Analysis: Adapted for Use in the Laboratories of by Frank Clowes, Joseph Bernard Coleman (1900)
"This is usually stated in terms of metallic iron, as has been described in the
standardisation of potassium dichromate solution. ..."
5. Work and Wages, in Continuation of Lord Brasey's ʻWork and Wages' and by Sydney John Chapman, Thomas Brassey Brassey (1904)
"... are probably to be explained by the extent to which standardisation has been
carried and highly specialised tools have been introduced. ..."