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Institution   /ˌɪnstɪtˈuʃən/   Listen
Institution

noun
1.
An organization founded and united for a specific purpose.  Synonym: establishment.
2.
An establishment consisting of a building or complex of buildings where an organization for the promotion of some cause is situated.
3.
A custom that for a long time has been an important feature of some group or society.  "The institution of slavery" , "He had become an institution in the theater"
4.
The act of starting something for the first time; introducing something new.  Synonyms: creation, foundation, founding, initiation, innovation, instauration, introduction, origination.  "The foundation of a new scientific society"
5.
A hospital for mentally incompetent or unbalanced person.  Synonyms: asylum, insane asylum, mental home, mental hospital, mental institution, psychiatric hospital.



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"Institution" Quotes from Famous Books



... now an established and well-recognized profession, but there is yet nothing approaching a standardized course of study leading to a degree in economic geology. There are as many different kinds of training as there are institutions in which geology is taught. Within an institution, also, it is seldom that any two persons take exactly the same groups of geologic studies. This situation allows wide latitude of training to meet ever changing requirements, but in other respects ...
— The Economic Aspect of Geology • C. K. Leith

... of this series of text-books is to provide concise teachable histories of art for class-room use in schools and colleges. The limited time given to the study of art in the average educational institution has not only dictated the condensed style of the volumes, but has limited their scope of matter to the general features of art history. Archaeological discussions on special subjects and aesthetic theories have been avoided. The main facts of history as settled by the best ...
— A Text-Book of the History of Painting • John C. Van Dyke

... have no place in, and in fact to be an enemy of, "liberal education." In 1880, at Birmingham, Huxley attacked this view in a speech delivered at the opening of the Mason College. Sir Josiah Mason, the benevolent founder of that great institution, had made it one of the conditions of the foundation that the College should make no provision for "mere literary instruction and education." This gave Huxley a text for raising the whole question of the relation of science to culture. He declared that he ...
— Thomas Henry Huxley; A Sketch Of His Life And Work • P. Chalmers Mitchell

... Whiskey's good luck, began to haunt the same yard; but Whiskey would by no means allow him to cultivate his young mistress's acquaintance. No indeed! he evidently considered that the institution would not support two. Sometimes he would appear to be conversing with the stranger on the most familiar and amicable terms in the back-yard; but if his mistress called his name, he would immediately start and chase his companion quite out ...
— Queer Little Folks • Harriet Beecher Stowe

... tri-partition to which a like "threeness" of climate, nationality, and even of religion corresponds. Hence the tripartition of the population into peasantry, bourgeoisie, and nobility should be upheld as an inviolable, foreordained institution, and to this end the separate traditions of the classes be piously conserved. Educational agencies ought to subserve the specific needs of the different ranks of society and be diversified accordingly. Riehl would even hark back to wholly ...
— The German Classics of The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Vol. VIII • Various


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