[
UK
/ɐfˌɪlɪˈeɪʃən/
]
[ US /əˌfɪɫiˈeɪʃən/ ]
[ US /əˌfɪɫiˈeɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
-
the act of becoming formally connected or joined
welcomed the affiliation of the research center with the university -
a social or business relationship
many close associations with England
he was sorry he had to sever his ties with other members of the team
a valuable financial affiliation
How To Use affiliation In A Sentence
- The mostly German-speaking cantons, or provinces, are divided nearly equally between the two religious affiliations.
- The course is open to people of all nationalities and religious affiliations, and the minimum age is 15 years.
- As a affiliation in concept, hierarchy comprehended form category.
- Less a matter of choice than of male social identity, party affiliation passed from father to son. American Manhood: Transformations in Masculinity from the Revolution to the Modern Era
- They had an affiliation with mobsters, drug dealings, illegal profiteers, and more, where they would store money, risk-free and securely, for everyone.
- She was also a grand needle woman, a talent which rather curiously led to a change in her religious affiliations.
- A less rigid membership and more open selections will, of course, loosen party affiliation as well as broaden it. Times, Sunday Times
- Socialist affiliations are recorded in the memoirs of the stone-mason Nadaud, the draughtsman Perdiguier and Suzanne Voilquin, who was a needlewoman.
- Most LDCs' affiliation status in international labor division system and its less developed situation in history lead to its subordination and passive status in international monetary system.
- GOI demostrates that a zealot is a zealot no matter what they claim as their ‘affiliation’. Think Progress » Debunking the Right: The World Did Not See the Iraqi Threat as Bush Did