Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "General's way of managing things? ", 11 letters:
cooperation

Alternative clues for the word cooperation

Word definitions for cooperation in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES whole-hearted support/acceptance/cooperation etc ▪ Montgomery’s new style of leadership met with Leslie’s whole-hearted approval. COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE bipartisan ▪ Clinton said he offered the deal as ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
late 15c., from Middle French coopération , or directly from Late Latin cooperationem (nominative cooperatio ) "a working together," noun of action from past participle stem of cooperari "to work together," from com- "with" (see com- ) + operari "to work" ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. joint operation or action; "their cooperation with us was essential for the success of our mission" [ant: competition ] the practice of cooperating; "economic cooperation"; "they agreed on a policy of cooperation"

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context usually uncountable English) The act of cooperate. 2 Active help from a person, organization, etc., such as an orderly sharing of space or resources. 3 association for mutual benefit, such as for purposes of production or purchase.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Cooperation (sometimes written as co-operation or coöperation ) is the process of groups of organisms working or acting together for common or mutual benefit, as opposed to working in competition for selfish benefit. Many animal and plant species cooperate ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cooperation \Co*["o]p`er*a"tion\, n. [L. co["o]peratio: cf. F. coop['e]ration.] The act of co["o]perating, or of operating together to one end; joint operation; concurrent effort or labor. Not holpen by the co["o]peration of angels. --Bacon. (Polit. ...

Usage examples of cooperation.

Emerson will always be kindly remembered by one and all for his cooperation, and nobody will ever again try to hand him the phonus bolonus when he is buying champagne, even if he is not buying it off of Dave the Dude.

The clearest demand for world-wide cooperation before the war, came from the Second International.

A more satisfactory working relationship I have never had, and I am convinced that many dogs and men were saved by our cooperation.

But General Domingo has been ordered by your President to give us full cooperation.

He has been specially urging the friends to have the Cause well represented in all Esperanto Congresses and associations, and by this means cultivate greater friendship and cooperation between them and the Esperantists.

Cooperation, as viewed by the Europeanists, meant meeting French demands.

Quite accustomed to seeing their requests for cooperation ignored in over half the states, to seeing their loaned files unaccountably become missing, to see the quarry suddenly disappear after an anonymous tip-off, the Z men worked on as best they might at a task they realized was not in accordance with the wishes of the majority of their fellow countrymen.

A normal condition of the entire body depends upon perfect and continuous functioning of the liver in cooperation with all the other vital organs.

Therefore, I shall require your cooperation - and I shall expect Gats Hackett to keep entirely out of the affair.

Treaty of Mospheira which calls for experimental contacts in science leading to agreements of definition and unequivocal terminology, with a view to future intercultural cooperations under the appointment of appropriate atevi officials.

If only the learning experience there could be modified to include at least occasional interethnic cooperation toward mutual successes, perhaps cross-group friendships would have a place to grow.

Marine Corps forces was innovative insofar as it required tight interservice cooperation and a streamlined command structure.

At the same time parliamentary circles learned that Foreign Minister Kanya had communicated to the ambassadors of our country in Berlin, London, and Paris, and that he personally had communicated the same to Knox, British Ambassador to Budapest, that Hungary was going to request in a note from Czechoslovakia to allow the fate of those territories in which Hungarians lived in majority to be decided by popular vote and that he had the cooperation of Poland in this matter also.

We go to Mars in the spirit of the new pragmatic cooperation among the nations of the world.

He had agreed, against his deepest instincts as a soldier, to accept this diplomatic post in the hope he might be able to help turn Earth and Minbar away from a dangerous militarism and xenophobia he had perceived growing on both worlds, attitudes that could threaten the cooperation between them that until now had kept the peace among many different worlds.