verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
allocate resources (=give them to a particular person, organization etc)
▪ I spoke to the official who was in charge of allocating the funds.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
randomly
▪ All hits against the chariot in hand-to-hand or shooting are randomly allocated as shown below.
▪ Patients were randomly allocated to groups for each test substance.
▪ For the initial experiment, at day 7, 70 mice were randomly allocated to one of three groups.
▪ Interventions - Children were randomly allocated to adenotonsillectomy, adenoidectomy, or neither procedure.
▪ The classic experiment requires both a control and an experimental group to which subjects are randomly allocated.
to
▪ Disposal related work may be allocated to, say, a sub-committee of the board to minimise disruptions.
■ NOUN
amount
▪ He said the committee could allocate a smaller amount and approve more later if needed.
area
▪ While some of these funds were earmarked for South Phoenix, others were allocated to more affluent areas of the city.
▪ There were a limited number of places allocated to different areas.
▪ The number of policyholders can not grow, and in this case the designer would not allocate any overflow areas.
▪ In 1993 they will be allocated to area managers but not yet to care managers.
authority
▪ This is the first time it has specifically allocated finance for local authority investment in recycling projects.
▪ All this highlighted the need for more land to be allocated by planning authorities for development.
▪ This is allocated between local authorities on the basis of their population and a complex formula.
basis
▪ Bowling lanes are allocated on the basis of games rather than time.
▪ As enacted in 1974, the formula allocated funds on the basis of three elements-population, overcrowded housing, and poverty.
▪ It is channelled through the Research Councils which will allocate it on the basis of the projects submitted to them.
▪ A territory is normally allocated on the basis of workload and/or potential sales.
▪ Previously the budget had always been allocated on a historical basis.
budget
▪ Being large, multi-national companies helps-they can allocate huge budgets to creating just the right online presence.
▪ Design teams should be allocated a total budget within which they agree to provide a design to the appropriate quality.
▪ This guidance is intended to inform all those involved in allocating resources and local budget setting.
▪ The federal government used population figures in its calculations when allocating regional budgets.
▪ Meanwhile, the Czechoslovak government has allocated a budget to promote its position on the dam abroad.
▪ With plans formulated, Kate is then allocated a budget to cover all aspects of the landscaping.
▪ Large commercial organisations need to allocate budgets to programmes such as research and development and design.
case
▪ One advantage of allocating a case to a student is he/she may have more time to spend in follow-up.
▪ And remember, it is the court that allocates cases to tracks.
▪ This lawyer should also allocate the cases.
costs
▪ Few banks can accurately allocate costs and measure the profitability of each line of business.
▪ Salomon Brothers was the only major firm on Wall Street in the early 1980s with no system for allocating costs.
▪ Another method is to allocate the total costs over the two years on the basis of work invoiced.
▪ The estimators' goal in manufacturing is to accurately allocate the costs associated with making products.
▪ Ten percent was allocated to administrative costs, and the remaining 20 percent for human service programs.
decision
▪ In terms of funding, there's going to have to be some political decision as to how we allocate those resources.
▪ In straitened times, group directors will face tough decisions about allocating resources between divisions.
▪ The use of linear programming as an aid to decision making when allocating scarce investment funds has been widely advocated.
▪ It is not only financial considerations, therefore, that guide the decisions for allocating limited training resources.
department
▪ Once recruited on this basis, the candidates would be allocated to departments.
expenditure
▪ Furthermore, it may be difficult to allocate expenditure and income for the period.
▪ It is a relatively crude way of allocating such expenditure. 10.
▪ Defence spending, however, fell, being allocated 11.6 percent of expenditure as compared with 12.1 percent in 1991.
▪ Total spending was set at R11,600 million, of which R9,000 million was allocated to recurrent expenditure.
funds
▪ In the former case, by employing civilian clerical staff a greater proportion of funds can be allocated for direct policing policies.
▪ The audit report was also critical of the amount of funds allocated to staff support of citizen participation activities.
▪ Finally, at departmental or agency level, the funds are allocated.
▪ Wilson to reject funds allocated to California.
▪ Remaining funds will be allocated to individual projects, a third to public health research and two-thirds to clinical research.
▪ I would like your recommendations on Vanguard funds in which to allocate my $ 492, 000.
government
▪ The government has allocated, for the introduction of the National Curriculum into 24,000 schools, the sum of £30 million.
▪ The government has allocated £50 million in 1992/93 and £100 million in 1993/94.
▪ Local government was allocated these responsibilities with great reluctance only after the government had explored every other possibility.
▪ That is why I was especially pleased to hear that the Government are prepared to allocate the necessary funds.
▪ Meanwhile, the Czechoslovak government has allocated a budget to promote its position on the dam abroad.
▪ The city government has allocated 50m pesos towards the cost of the two extensions.
▪ The Czech government has allocated 1,160 million crowns to help resolve environmental problems in the region.
group
▪ When a table is transferred into the Working-Set the entries are allocated as bundles to groups of lexicographers.
▪ Patients were randomly allocated to groups for each test substance.
▪ She may be allocated a group of learners, and follow them throughout their training.
▪ To establish firm links, tutors are allocated to groups of schools so that staff come to know their tutor well.
housing
▪ On top of that, £358,000 was allocated to housing associations.
▪ Help should also be allocated to provide low-cost housing for local people.
▪ The couple were allocated their new housing association home through Middlesbrough Council.
market
▪ In short, here is a service which yields substantial benefits but for which the market would allocate no resources.
▪ Perfectly competitive free market equilibrium will then allocate resources efficiently.
▪ In Chapter 15 we set out the basic case for allowing free markets to allocate resources.
member
▪ Unsolicited tapes are allocated to the various members of the A&R team.
million
▪ For this year's flight, the space agencies will allocate another $ 5 million.
▪ The Clinton administration has proposed expanding Operation Restore Trust nationwide by allocating it $ 597 million under the fiscal 1997 budget proposal.
▪ In 1994, the legislature allocated only $ 2 million statewide to shore up security at older facilities.
money
▪ However, no agreement was reached on how much money should be allocated.
▪ Individual investors and Wall Street money managers tend to allocate more of their resources to countries with bigger stock markets.
▪ Admittedly, this sum is but a fraction of money allocated for career development this year.
▪ However, no money has been allocated specifically for this purpose.
▪ The majority of the speakers requested that large amounts of money be allocated for housing rehabilitation.
▪ If so, can he tell us how much money has been allocated to that exercise?
number
▪ It might be better to allocate numbers to customers in case there are duplicate names.
▪ Croydon cars were allocated the numbers 345-399.
▪ In the first the computer threw up the names, in the second it allocated the numbers.
▪ Each has been allocated a certain number of streets, but like everything else it takes time.
▪ A system for allocating a small number of staff from a central point on a daily basis should be devised.
▪ Each person is allocated a number of a football team.
▪ You will be allocated a unique reference number.
patient
▪ Their suspicions were fuelled when the ward allocation book, which denotes which nurse is allocated to which patient, disappeared.
percent
▪ Defence spending, however, fell, being allocated 11.6 percent of expenditure as compared with 12.1 percent in 1991.
place
▪ The third method is to allocate places to those who have the muscle to demand them.
▪ People with different skills and training were to be allocated to places where these could be fully utilised, unlike before.
▪ First-year students are allocated most of these places.
product
▪ To attain efficiency, it would be expected that factors of production would be allocated so that their marginal products would be equal.
▪ So the marketing director enters a coalition with the research director to pressure the boss to allocate more resources to product design.
purpose
▪ Your brain was designed and allocated for eternal purposes.
▪ Members ballot for the right to introduce bills on Fridays allocated to this purpose.
▪ However, no money has been allocated specifically for this purpose.
record
▪ If this were not done, data from previous files might still be present in addresses to which records were not allocated.
school
▪ To establish firm links, tutors are allocated to groups of schools so that staff come to know their tutor well.
seat
▪ Each of the 10 counties were to be allocated a seat, with two each for exiled parties.
▪ The new Constitution allocated one seat to a representative of Rotuma island.
space
▪ This allocates more space to cars than to children.
▪ Gliffs have notions of geometry, and can allocate and request space.
student
▪ All public dollars allocated for the student now followed him or her to the other district.
▪ Frezzo said discussions are under way with the San Francisco school district to allocate money to pay students to maintain its networks.
system
▪ A system for allocating a small number of staff from a central point on a daily basis should be devised.
▪ Salomon Brothers was the only major firm on Wall Street in the early 1980s with no system for allocating costs.
▪ The Government says it will use the new system to allocate resources to those councils with the worst housing problems.
▪ Others regard it as a more substantial system for planning, allocating and controlling resources.
task
▪ More generally we might ask the following: What is the best way to introduce and allocate learning tasks?
▪ The operating system is the set of instructions that allocate resources and order tasks within a computer.
▪ Boot and I had been allocated the less spectacular task of making and using miniature Barkausen-Kurz tubes as possible receivers.
time
▪ Even if it's just ten minutes a day, allocate some time for your self-esteem programme.
▪ In one, the businessperson allocated time, spreading the project over several weeks.
▪ The places on our team had largely been allocated by the time I took up the reins.
▪ Now is when you should decide how you want to allocate your time to these three activities in the future.
▪ Moreover, the findings challenge conventional assumptions about the amounts of time the different subjects should be allocated.
▪ He is a selfish, competitive fighter who is totally calculating about how he allocates his time and resources.
▪ The senior nurse may also allocate time for individual teaching of learners, or for group tutorial sessions.
▪ In order to maintain a proper balance in your life, you must be prepared to allocate some time to yourself each day.
work
▪ The Development Manager will allocate the work to an appropriate member of the development team.
▪ It's his job to allocate the work to his staff.
▪ Further, each group is allocated at least some such work.
▪ But his fiancee may think that all time not allocated to necessities such as work should be spent together.
▪ In the hours you allocate for work, sort out your priorities, reordering them when unforeseen circumstances arise.
▪ To allocate and prioritise the work of the section.
■ VERB
decide
▪ They may have the ability to decide how to allocate scarce resources, whether they are finances, promotions or new equipment.
▪ All relevant factors are taken into account by the funding councils when they decide how to allocate resources.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Several single parent families have been allocated homes on the new site.
▪ The company has allocated $1000 to the team to get the project started.
▪ The results will depend on how each department allocates its resources.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ All this highlighted the need for more land to be allocated by planning authorities for development.
▪ He is a selfish, competitive fighter who is totally calculating about how he allocates his time and resources.
▪ Investors who allocate money based on market size may not be as diversified as they thought.
▪ It is a process whereby scarce resources are allocated among competing powers and claimants.
▪ The government has allocated, for the introduction of the National Curriculum into 24,000 schools, the sum of £30 million.
▪ We are allocated a nursery for our weekly spell of baby care.