standardisation

/ˌstæn.də.daɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/ (bre, ipa) · /ˌstæn.dɚ.dəˈzeɪ.ʃən/ (ame, ipa)

standardisation — noun

1. the act of changing rules, designs, or procedures so similar things follow one s

1.名詞C1
釋義

the act of changing rules, designs, or procedures so similar things follow one shared pattern, or the state reached after that change

例句

The hospital introduced standardisation of labels on all medicine bottles.

standardisation of + labels/rules/procedures

After standardisation, every form on the website used the same date format.

After standardisation, ...

同義詞
  • uniformity

    stresses the finished sameness more than the process of getting there.

  • harmonisation

    allows some local differences, while standardisation usually pushes for one shared model.

  • alignment

    broader and lighter; things can be aligned without becoming identical.

  • normalisation

    often stresses bringing something back to an accepted norm rather than setting one common rule.

反義詞
  • variation

    stresses differences between versions, methods, or forms.

  • customisation

    focuses on changing something for individual needs instead of making it match one model.

文法句型

standardisation of [rules/processes/designs/parts]

用法筆記

British spelling; American English usually writes standardization. Most common in formal discussions of rules, labels, manufacturing, data, or public policy rather than personal behavior.

常見錯誤

We need standardisation between the two friends.
We need the two friends to agree on one routine.
💡'standardisation' is used for systems, rules, or procedures, not personal relationships.
The standardisation happened in one meeting.
The standardisation process was completed after several meetings.
💡the noun usually refers to a process, not one brief moment.