0 past simple and past participle of mobilize
1 to organize or prepare something, such as a group of people, for a purpose:
Representatives for all the main candidates are trying to mobilize voter support.
The government has mobilized several of the army's top combat units.
Troops have been mobilizing for the past three weeks.
These mannose polymers are a form of storage carbohydrate that is mobilized following germination.
Both countries mobilized their armies, but pressure from the international community averted further escalation.
These channels then mobilized group and individual reactions, creating new measures of power in the villages in question.
The most assertively discontented and mobilized regions received larger benefits than their more docile - though arguably more 'needy' or 'deserving' - neighbours.
They impeded recruitment for military service by obliterating lists of mobilized soldiers.
Within the cancer field a highly mobilized group of patients and medical professionals campaign to promote the philosophy that much cancer is avoidable and curable.
The anterolateral papillary muscle is fully mobilized by detaching die muscular bands which are inserted on to die lateral wall of die right ventricle.
The mobilized vanguard saw its role as class organising and agitation.