0 changes made to improve a system, organization, or law -- reforma
1 to change a system, organization, or law in order to improve it -- reformować
2 to change your behaviour and stop doing bad things, or to make someone else do this -- resocjalizować (się), poprawiać (się)
However, rural reform has not abolished such ruralism but replaced it with its own version.
The politically popular fertilizer subsidies are generally disappointing and should be replaced by market-smart grants or by institutional reforms.
They attribute this result to certain reforms of the party's nominating process.
It fails to demonstrate how identity constrains paths to social reform.
Perhaps a clearer way to assess the impact of a pension reform could use ' ' typical ' ' career earnings paths, holding constant overall contributions.
The paradox is that welfare reform reduces the scale of government in one sense but expands it in another.
The prevailing dynamic of party clientelism has remained untouched, limiting the prospects for effective, far-reaching reform.
They were mutually dedicated to reforming institutions and removing privileges that they regarded as impediments to growth and stability.
中文繁体
(尤指透過改變人的行為或事物的構造而)改革,改進,改造, (尤指人的行為或事物構造方面的)改革,改進,改造,改良…
More中文简体
(尤指通过改变人的行为或事物的构造而)改革,改进,改造, (尤指人的行为或事物构造方面的)改革,改进,改造,改良…
MoreEspañol
reforma, reformar, reforma [feminine…
MorePortuguês
reforma, reformar…
More日本語
改良, (組織や法律の)改革, 改正…
MoreTürk dili
yenilik, ıslahat, reform…
MoreFrançais
réforme [feminine], réformer, s’amender…
MoreCatalan
reforma, reformar…
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