Online Google Dictionary

redistribute 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˌrēdəˈstribˌyo͞ot/,
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redistributed, past participle; redistributed, past tense; redistributing, present participle; redistributes, 3rd person singular present;
  1. Distribute (something) differently or again, typically to achieve greater social equality
    • - their primary concern was to redistribute income from rich to poor

  1. distribute anew; "redistribute the troops more strategically"
  2. (redistributed) having population and industries relocated from urban to outlying areas; "redistributed industries"
  3. (redistribution) distributing again; "the revolution resulted in a redistribution of wealth"
  4. Redistribution of wealth is the transfer of income, wealth or property from some individuals to others caused by a social mechanism "such as tax laws, monetary policies, or tort law" . ...
  5. (Redistribution (chemistry)) In chemistry, redistribution usually refers to the exchange of anionic ligands bonded to metal and metalloid centers. The conversion does not involve redox, in contrast to disproportionation reactions. ...
  6. (Redistribution) One of the three principles of exchange:Associated with chiefdoms, some nonindustrial states, and states with managed economies.It operates when goods, services, or their equivalent move from the local level to a center. ...
  7. (Redistribution) A periodic re-drawing of electoral boundaries. Boundaries may be re-drawn when a state becomes entitled to a change in seat numbers according to the constitution. Alternatively, every seven years, electorates are re-drawn to bring seats back within average. ...
  8. (Redistribution) A pharmacokinetic term that describes the movement of drug from one comapartment to another. For example, from the vascular compartment to the fat.
  9. (Redistribution) A policy that taxes some individuals and uses the proceeds to pay transfers to others.
  10. (Redistribution) Changes to boundaries of electorates in line with the principle that the number of voters in each electorate must not vary from a predetermined electoral quota by more than 5 per cent at the time of an election. Carried out before each Legislative Assembly election.
  11. (Redistribution) Government taxing of Peter to benefit Paul.  Also referred to as "transfer payments."  Virtually unheard of in the US before 18__; ubiquitous today.  Indeed, __% of the federal government's budget in 200_ consisted of transfer payments via Social Security, Medicare, etc., etc. ...
  12. (Redistribution) It will redistribute income from those on fixed incomes, such as pensioners, and shift it to those who draw a more flexible income, for example from profits and most wages which may keep pace with inflation. ...
  13. (Redistribution) The transfer of funds from the wealthy achiever-class to their poor victim-class.  Because the gap between the Rich and the Poor is as wrong and immoral as it is wide, the solemn duty of the Third Way Sociologist Parliamentary Utopian Government is to take money from the ...
  14. (Redistribution) Transfer of monies, benefits and services from one group in the society to another so its members receive a balance different from that created through the marketplace.
  15. (Redistribution) refers to the reallocation of lands to farmers and regular farm workers who are landless, irrespective of tendril status.
  16. (redistribution) A type of economic exchange system, it marked the historical transition from tribalism to more stable and centralized communities, usually organized around a temple or shrine.
  17. (redistribution) The movement of contents between adjacent nodes to equalize the loading.
  18. (redistribution) [JP 1-02] (DoD) The act of effecting transfer in control, utilization, or location of material between units or activities within or among the military services or between the military services and other Federal agencies.
  19. (redistribution) a mechanism whereby a politically or economically powerful individual (or group) collects goods and services from the members of society and reallocates them among the society's members.
  20. (redistribution) a mode of exchange which implies the operation of some central organizing authority. Goods are received or appropriated by the central authority, and subsequently some of them are sent by that authority to other locations.
  21. (redistribution) “fencing” stolen wealth in exchange for votes
  22. Redistribution is the process of importing a route into the current routing domain from another part of the network that uses another routing protocol. When this occurs, the current domain has to translate all the information, particularly known routes, from the other protocol. ...