mobilise in the PONS Dictionary

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
It has also often mobilised people across various political parties for single causes.
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Lobby, mobilise and influence the policy community towards a more just and sustainable society.
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Although too old in 1914 to be mobilised, he joined up as a volunteer.
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Thus, the general staffs of the great powers developed elaborate timetables to mobilise faster than any of their rivals.
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Secondly, biosurfactants contribute to the formation of micelles providing a physical mechanism to mobilise oil in a moving aqueous phase.
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He also lived high lifestyle and his efforts to mobilise opinion against the slave trade had cost a good deal of money.
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They staged protests to expressed their opposition, often mobilising their children.
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But apart from this, the spiritual forces of the nation should mobilise and deploy themselves in a common defensive front.
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None are intended to mobilise as separate units, but rather to reinforce existing regular regiments.
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Although riven by internal feuding, these confederations could mobilise large forces and may have presented a greater threat to the empire than previously thought.
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