1. organising - Noun
2. organising - Verb
organising
present participle of organise
organising (countable and uncountable, plural organisings)
The act or process by which something is organised.
Wherever there is greater joy, there is the direction of everyone's activity, because the innermost of everyone is really the lighted lamp of Total Knowledge, total organising power of knowledge, it's all bliss, it's not necessary for the people to suffer. Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
Socialism, by organising production without class oppression, by ensuring the well-being of all members of the state, gives full play to the "sympathies” of the population, thereby promoting and greatly accelerating the drawing together and fusion of the nations. Vladimir Lenin
If you don't believe there's some organising principle, or somebody up in the sky pulling the strings, then it can be very stressful. And nature itself is very arbitrary - it's not malevolent or benevolent; it doesn't even know we're here. Michael Shannon
As a goalkeeper you need to be good at organising the people in front of you and motivating them. You need to see what's going on and react to the threats. Just like a good manager in business. Peter Shilton
Man is a competitive creature, and the seeds of conflict are built deep into our genes. We fought each other on the savannah and only survived against great odds by organising ourselves into groups which would have had a common purpose, giving morale and fortitude. Robert Winston
I would probably have been very content as a scholar to have carried on organising exhibitions and writing books and teaching. Thomas P. Campbell