Examples of assembly in the following topics:
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- The Christian Church is the assembly of followers of Jesus Christ; in Christianity, a church is the building where its members meet.
- The Christian Church is the assembly or association of followers of Jesus Christ.
- In the New Testament, the term "church," which in Greek meant "assembly," is used for local communities, and in a universal sense to mean all believers.
- Describe the Church as the assembly of followers of Jesus Christ, and the building where its members meet.
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- In a series of empirical studies of assemblies of people, McPhail (1991) argues that crowds vary along a number of dimensions, and that traditional stereotypes of emotionality and unanimity often do not describe what happens in crowds.
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- The most common system that is deemed democratic in the modern world is parliamentary democracy, in which the voting public takes part in elections and chooses politicians to represent them in a legislative assembly.
- The members of the assembly then make decisions with a majority vote.
- Elements of direct democracy exist on a local level and, in exceptions, on the national level in many countries, though these systems coexist with representative assemblies.
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- Ford's employees worked in factories, on assembly lines, doing routinized tasks over and over in order to produce cars.
- In most cases, this is understood as manufacturing, the type of labor that takes place in factories, on assembly lines, and that which involves heavy machinery.
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- An assembly line is an example of the division of labor.
- An assembly line is a good example of a system that incorporates the division of labor; each worker is completing a discrete task to increase efficiency of overall production.
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- Citizens have the right to free speech and freedom of assembly, for example, but they also have the responsibility to follow the laws of the land and to pay taxes.
- Citizens have the right to free speech and freedom of assembly, for example, but they also have the responsibility to follow the laws of the land and to pay taxes.
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- The most common system that is deemed democratic in the modern world is parliamentary democracy in which the voting public takes part in elections and chooses politicians to represent them in a legislative assembly.
- The members of the assembly then make decisions with a majority vote.
- Elements of direct democracy exist on a local level and in exceptions on the national level in many countries, although these systems coexist with representative assemblies.
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- Marxist inequality is exemplified by the relationship between a factory owner and factory employee—a factory owner is concerned only with financial profits and earns material wealth, while the assembly line employee is concerned with the conditions of production and is unlikely to accumulate material wealth.
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- The book's protagonist immigrates from Eastern Europe to Chicago in search of employment and eventual prosperity, but instead finds dangerous assembly lines, unsanitary water, and cramped tenement buildings.
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- An employee on a car assembly line might feel alienation from the product of his/her labor, as he/she cannot claim credit for the finished product (the car), and perhaps cannot even afford to own the car the assembly line produces.