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infrastructure
[ in-fruh-struhk-cher ]
noun
- the fundamental facilities and systems serving a country, city, or area, as transportation and communication systems, power plants, and schools:
Investments in infrastructure helped the U.S. economy recover from the Great Depression.
- the basic, underlying framework or features of a system or organization:
Over the years, as the incidence of cancer increased, the infrastructure of the hospital was developed to accommodate the new cases.
Synonyms: support, foundation, basis
- the military installations of a country:
We could do much with just a fraction of the billions spent to maintain our robust overseas infrastructure.
infrastructure
/ ˈɪnfrəˌstrʌktʃə /
noun
- the basic structure of an organization, system, etc
- the stock of fixed capital equipment in a country, including factories, roads, schools, etc, considered as a determinant of economic growth
Other Words From
- in·fra·struc·tur·al adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of infrastructure1
Example Sentences
The national security journal Homeland Security Today warned that the Pine Tree Party “is quickly accelerating, recruiting, and pushing the ideological bounds to promote infrastructure damage and violence now directly.”
Larger funds could then be invested in UK infrastructure projects, the government says.
It has also accused Hamas of using civilians as human shields by operating inside homes and civilian infrastructure.
She pointed out that the existing infrastructure at the Hyperion plant has a history of failures and sewage spills.
But it is unclear how much of it will be set aside to deal with road maintenance, as a chunk of it is being ringfenced to address problems with Northern Ireland’s wastewater infrastructure.
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