When used in agriculture, this term usually refers to the consolidation of farms into very large production units.
The introduction of large-scale trade or manufacture.
The introduction of the factory system, that is, specialized establishments where there is the centralization of power-driven machinery and where workers gather specifically for the purpose of production. The workers work for wages and do not own the tools of production.
the process that began over 200 years ago of replacing small-scale industries with large-scale production - spinoff benefits from the indutrialization process have meant living standards have generally increased but there have been negative effects on the environment
the process through which industrial capacity [see also Industry] is created. And this process is given prominence for at least two reasons. Firstly, historians use the industrial revolution as the starting point of modern history. Secondly, the increased productivity, and increased range, of goods and services arising from industrialization bring the potential for higher living standards, although who will benefit from the expansion of industry is a key question to be asked in any particular case. Industrialized countries are then those that have achieved higher productivity and higher living standards.
the development of industry on an extensive scale
a major objective of developing countries
The movement within a culture or economic system toward an increased emphasis on large-scale/mechanized industry rather than agricultural/small- scale commercial activity. Although initially conceived as a primarily economic process in its broadest sense of organization, capitalization, and mechanization, industrialization has sweeping social and cultural implications. As well as determining the manner in which things are produced (and, therefore, what kinds of products are available), the process of industrialization also effects the way labour and other resources are divided up within a culture.
The growth of machine production and the factory system; the process of introducing manufacturing into countries or regions where most of the people are engaged in primary economic activities.
The transformation of an economy from agricultural to industrial, often followed by urbanization.
The phase of a country's economic development in which industry grows faster than agriculture and gradually comes to play the leading role in the economy.
to introduce industry to a country or a region(empty)(empty) lead a bluish-gray metallic element occurring naturally in galena and used in building and alloys lignite-ore brown coal Malaria an often fatal, mosquito-born disease Manhattan Project the U.S. making of the atomic bomb, which involved 125,000 people and cost almost $2,000,000,000 matrix a pattern of secondary minerals in turquoise that form interlocking polygons referred to as "spider web" metabolizes the process or being processed by metabolism metal any of a class of chemical elements, lustrous ductile solids and good conductors of heat and electricity and forming basic oxides methane the main part of natural gas, colorless, odorless, flammable and toxic mineral any of the species into which inorganic substances are classified molybdenum a silver-white, brittle transition element occurring naturally in molybdenite, and used in steel to give strength and resistance to corrosion mutation- the process or change or alteration natural resources a naturally-occurring supply that can be drawn on...a country's collective wealth nuclei the central or main thing around which others are collected