0 present participle of direct --
1 to control or be in charge of an activity, organization, etc.: --
2 to aim something in a particular direction: --
Criticism was directed against/at the manufacturers of the product.
Was that remark directedat/towards me?
4 to order someone, especially officially: --
Also, there were over forty sets of managers and agents directing company affairs.
If growth is the key, then governments may help both growth and the poor by directing their expenditures to infrastructural projects, especially roads and bridges.
Men are managers of the public sphere, directing and performing those activities and guarding those spaces that affect the wellbeing of corporate groups.
And during that time, were you concentrating on acting, or directing, or writing?
There are two difficulties, however, in using domain dependencies for directing the selection of one design approach over another.
Some kinds of attention can be thought of as directing the inputs to a module.
As pointed out earlier, higher priority may be given to directing commercial credit to non-environmental investments.
At every stage there are footnotes directing the interested reader to possible sources of more information and a good bibliography.