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Definition of Trade union
1. Noun. An organization of employees formed to bargain with the employer. "You have to join the union in order to get a job"
Generic synonyms: Organisation, Organization
Specialized synonyms: Industrial Union, Vertical Union, Craft Union, Company Union, I.w.w., Industrial Workers Of The World, Iww
Group relationships: Labor, Labor Movement, Trade Union Movement
Derivative terms: Trade Unionist, Unionize, Unionize
Definition of Trade union
1. Noun. An organization whose members belong to the same trade and that acts collectively to address common issues. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Trade Union
Literary usage of Trade union
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. British Trade Unionism Against the Trades Union Congress by Gerald Allen Dorfman (1983)
"The Problem of trade union Purpose. THE PROBLEM OF UNION-GOVERNMENT RELATIONS IN
BRITAIN The disruptive power of unions in Britain has been painfully ..."
2. The History of Trade Unionism by Sidney Webb, Beatrice Potter Webb (1902)
"But no salaried officer of the trade union world feels it to be his business to
improve the Labour Code for any industry but his own. ..."
3. The Armies of Labor: A Chronicle of the Organized Wage-earners by Samuel Peter Orth (1921)
"Like the Federation, each particular trade union has a tripartite structure: there
... The sovereign authority of a trade union is its general convention, ..."
4. The Labour Gazette by Canada Dept. of Labour (1902)
"trade union LEGISLATION. Legislation in regard to organized labour in Canada ...
Definition of trade union. Under this Act a trade union is defined as 'such ..."
5. Industrial Democracy by Sidney Webb, Beatrice Potter Webb (1897)
"It is therefore important to consider to what extent the constitutional problems
of trade union democracy are analogous to those of national or municipal ..."
6. Democracy and Liberty by William Edward Hartpole, Lecky (1896)
"The trade union Act of 1871 remedied this evil. It enabled all trade unions, even
though they were acting in restraint of trade, to obtain full corporate ..."