globalisation

Frequency: Very High

Translation

n. the process by which businesses or other organizations develop international influence or start operating on an international scale, involving economic, cultural, and other interactions and influences across the globe.

Real-world Examples

They oppose globalisation and favour protectionism.

Source: The Economist (Summary)

Nespresso's factories are gleaming temples to globalisation.

Source: The Guardian (Article Version)

Football, more than any other sport, has thrived on globalisation.

Source: The Economist (Summary)

Covid-19 messed up supply chains; war and sabre-rattling are undermining globalisation.

Source: The Economist - Finance

For example, recently I've been interested in the idea of globalisation.

Source: Cambridge top student book sharing

The challenges that identity politics and globalisation present to them are not new either.

Source: The Guardian (Article Version)

Mr Levi frets that America's detachment from global energy markets risks putting globalisation into reverse.

Source: The Economist - Arts

Meanwhile, globalisation has been rewarding winners ever more generously.

Source: The Economist - Comprehensive

But it is also the central node in the network that underpins globalisation.

Source: The Economist (Summary)

So that's true globalisation without the physical isolation.

Source: Future World Construction

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