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Words in Business News
By Jon Fernquest

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[Thai Economics Library | Archives (for history)]
March 14, 2008

Deploy

deploy (verb) - prepare a resource so that it is ready to be used

deployment (noun) - preparing a resource so that it is ready to be used

deployed (adjective) - a resource prepared and ready to be used

deployment of broadband Internet - making the necessary investments so that broadband internet service is available for subscribers

deploy resources
deploy resources according to needs
deploy resources to the best commercial advantage
deploy the company's capacity more effectively
a parachute that deploys satisfactorily
seek to identify, train and deploy gifted individuals

deploy soldiers
deploy troops
deploy police officers
deploy units
deploy naval units
deploy vehicles
deploy staff

deploy resources effectively
deploy resources in the most effective manner she can devise
resources obtained and deployed by

a study into whether or not to deploy
develop and deploy custom applications throughout the company
solutions which deploy a model
deploy specialist skills
please deploy your political energies in a different way
the database or interface used to deploy software applications
deploy a system

deployed all their charms in an attempt to Y
a big chunk of public-sector investment money deployed in the Japanese stockmarket
deployed in circumstances Y

deploys a body of knowledge and skills in changing circumstances
the skills a manager deploys in planning and directing


Example sentences:

* "Resources have to be obtained and deployed by the bureaus entrusted with the task."

* "If workloads increase, extra staff can be deployed."

* Each sector director looks at his business on a national level, ignoring regional boundaries, and has the power to deploy all his resources to the best commercial advantage. "

* "The latest shuttle mission aims to deploy a new spy satellite."

* "No one would doubt the market's need to deploy its capacity more effectively, some marine syndicates work at less than half strength while syndicates in different businesses are pushing their limits."

* "Such financial and staffing delegation is intended to enable governing bodies and headteachers to deploy their resources in accordance with their own needs and priorities and to make schools more responsive to parents, pupils, the local community and employers."

* "No parachute will deploy satisfactorily unless it has a set of equal length shroud lines of adequate length, and divided into two hanks for attachment to the harness."

* "The more KGB agents in the country, the more men the intelligence services have to deploy to watch and counter their activities."

* "Accepting that evangelism is no optional extra, the church must seek to identify, train and deploy those with the evangelistic gift."

* "Pipework and cable have to be laid and, if you deploy central heating pumps, they need to be housed in a way that enables them to be accessible, yet invisible."

* "The resources of the AIB and its equivalent organisations throughout the world are necessarily limited for reasons of economy, and the person in charge has to deploy his forces in the most effective manner he can devise while at the same time always keeping enough reserves in hand in case of a major catastrophe."

* "Rochester Telephone Co, Rochester, New York has called in Bell Communications Research Inc to help with a study into whether or not to deploy a broadband fibre optic network in its local service area."

* "McCaw Cellular Communications Inc, Kirkland, Washington, has signed a contract for NeXT hardware and services to be used to develop and deploy custom applications throughout the company, with a tentative commitment for `;several thousand'; NeXTs over five years."

* "Using solutions which deploy these models, production and operations divisions should, for example, be able to share well and drilling information with their geology and geophysics counterparts."

* "Equally, all team members have professional aspirations to deploy their specialist skills in a sustained and structured fashion."

* "I want instead a humane, moral, critical, and intelligent, culture of dissent, which would deploy political energies in very different ways."

* "The advantages of being able to deploy the micro-budget came from the fact that the case manager was both the person undertaking the assessment, and the direct worker who understood local opportunities."

* "We talked about each department erm being able to invest in their own technology and make their own er decisions on what sort of database or interface they would use to deploy their applications."

* "It enables us to develop application on for instance Windows Three and exploit all of the functionality and features of Windows and deploy on Open Look, Motif and Macintosh.

* "The police have decided to deploy more than one hundred officers on what called a tidal flow operation, slowly shifting their attention from outside to inside the stadium."

* "Let us be clear about this: if we were to deploy naval units, they could be effective only if they were authorised to fire."

* "Without those facts we cannot deploy the resources effectively."

* "The South Korean President announced that South Korea will not manufacture, possess, store deploy or use nuclear weapons, neither would it develop nuclear reprocessing or enrichment facilities."

* "The competition for resources which expresses such conflict will increase when resources get scarcer, and greater efforts will be made to deploy power resources, many of which lie dormant during periods of expansion."

* "They add up to a novel of leaking secrets and amputated thoughts, of wildly comic material sometimes dully, almost dutifully deployed, as if the humour had escaped the teller; of people missing each other in dialogue."

* He concentrates primarily on the way artists have deployed scientific ideas and instruments."

* "In October of that year the King came to Compi?gne as the guest of the Emperor and Empress, who both deployed all their charms in an attempt to woo him into a declaration of support for France."

* "Ever since the finance minister directed late last year that a big chunk of public-sector investment money be deployed in the Japanese stockmarket, the tactics of those managing these funds have grown increasingly heavy-handed."

* "They will now be moved into one of the three remaining homes for the elderly on the city's west bank and it is understood that staff will also be deployed at these units."

* "The London Ambulance Service usually deploys 110 vehicles."

* "She deploys her heavy artillery."

* "It is a bucket-shaped attachment that deploys when a plane lands; it is designed solely to stop the plane flying."

* "Often, she deploys explanatory frameworks taken from traditional and egalitarian feminist psychology."

* "She deploys a Foucauldian version of Lacanian theory."

* "Broadly speaking, one might say that, in monarchical law, punishment is a ceremonial of sovereignty; it uses the ritual marks of the vengeance that it applies to the body of the condemned man; and it deploys before the eyes of the spectators an effect of terror as intense as it is discontinuous, irregular and always above its own laws, the physical presence of the sovereign and of his power."

* "The Economist dismissed the parallel, saying that differences between companies are greater than those between humans, and that a better analogy for the management thinker is the coach of a sports team, who deploys a body of knowledge and skills in changing circumstances as rival teams learn to outwit each other."

* "It also requires the skills a producer deploys in planning and directing the production of separate elements which are then combined to make a finished programme."

* "Occupied by his own cliches, his principles, and his strategies, the sick mind of the central colourless figure unwittingly deploys subversive discursive counter-strategies that turn these conventional weapons back on themselves and expose them for what they are."

* "In his weakened state he is unable to control his own metaphors, to keep the various terminologies he deploys distinct."

* "In the second part of the book, Larry internalizes the discursive metaphor and deploys it in order to describe psychological phenomena."

* "I repeat that what is important is how a school deploys its teaching staff, not the number of people it happens to have on its books."

* "The gallery deploys different systems of organisation from those adopted by the Design Museum; exhibits are proposed less as objects of desire than as object lessons."


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