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Definition of Reaffiliation
1. Noun. Affiliation anew.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Reaffiliation
Literary usage of Reaffiliation
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science by Johns Hopkins University (1914)
"... they would con- »ider reaffiliation. The Plasterers also decided to have no
l ..irt in the new council. Of those unions which did attend tin- m-, ..."
2. The Encyclopedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"This arrangement was set aside by the House of Lords in 1895, but a reaffiliation
took place in 1807. In 1887-1888 a common dining-hall for the students wus ..."
3. Colonial Trade of Maryland, 1689-1715 by Margaret Shove Morriss (1914)
"... replied that when the International Association of Steam Fitters and the
Bricklayers were seated in the Council they would consider reaffiliation. ..."
4. The Virginia Committee System and the American Revolution by James Miller Leake (1917)
"... of this strike four new unions were formed, the reaffiliation of a seceded
union was secured, and the organization of a textile council was effected. ..."
5. The Organizability of Labor by William Oswald Weyforth (1917)
"... which formed the Longshoremen of the Pacific,82 representing a membership, it
was claimed by one writer, of about 10000 men.88 In 1909 the reaffiliation ..."