organised
it is used to organise some thing
British English spelling: organist, organise, organiser, organisation, etc.
The word 'organized' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to organize.The noun forms of the verb to organize are organizer, organization, and the gerund, organizing.
The only difference between organization and organization is the fact that one is written with a z and the other with an s. Americans spell organization with a z.
The root is the verb "to organise".
Australians typically spell "organise" with an "s" instead of a "z" as "organise."
No. Organise is a verb.
Yes, the word organise is a verb.
The correct spelling in British English is organise."We will organise a fundraiser".The correct spelling in American English is organize."I will organize a family lunch".
Yes, it's past tense of organise (or organize in American spelling). She organised the books. But pay attention to how it's used in a sentence, because the same word is also an adjective. She is an organised person.
desorganise
thighs
organise perhaps
To organise scripts.
to organise the map
Apparantly The people who organise it are trying to organise for the games to be held in London and use the facilities used by the 2012 athletes.
To organise their candidates campaign.