What is another word for Factories?

Pronunciation: [fˈaktəɹˌiz] (IPA)

The word "factories" can be replaced by a variety of synonyms that describe places where goods are manufactured or processed. Some of these words include production facilities, manufacturing plants, industrial sites, assembly lines, mills, workshops, and worksites. Each of these words can describe different types of factories or specific industries. For example, a mill is often used to describe a factory that processes raw materials, while an assembly line is often used to describe a factory that produces goods using a conveyor belt system. When writing about factories, it's important to consider the specific type of industry and manufacturing process being used, as each term may carry different connotations and meanings.

What are the paraphrases for Factories?

Paraphrases are restatements of text or speech using different words and phrasing to convey the same meaning.
Paraphrases are highlighted according to their relevancy:
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What are the hypernyms for Factories?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.
  • Other hypernyms:

    Businesses, Industrial complexes, Industrial plants, Manufacturing Sites, Production Facilities.

Usage examples for Factories

I know something of our girls in London who work at the great Factories.
"The Furnace"
Rose Macaulay
The management of all State Factories to be committed to the workmen employed in them.
"Contemporary Socialism"
John Rae
The building trades are always busy in bad times, because money and labour are then cheap, and the opportunity is seized of building or extending Factories, and laying down plant of every description.
"Contemporary Socialism"
John Rae

Famous quotes with Factories

  • Factories are the workplaces of our National Socialist racial comrades.
    Fritz Todt
  • ...there is nothing that the most prominent men in the Liberal party more earnestly desire than that labour representation, direct labour representation, shall be as large as possible...It is sometimes said to me, "Oh! but you are against State intervention in matters of great social reform". At this time of the day it would be absurd for any man who has mastered all the Mining Regulations Acts, the Factories Acts, the great mass of regulation which affects trade; it would be absurd for any man to stand on a platform and say he was entirely against State intervention. I, for my part, have never taken that position...My own belief is that in the matters of hours and of wages for adult male labour the interference would be a bad and mischievous thing...that in such matters, for example, as housing of the poor and so forth, the proper machinery through which to carry out these operations is municipal and not Parliamentary.
    John Morley
  • Factories today are being run less and less by the authority of experience only, and more and more by the authority of figures and facts. The superintendent and manager of long experience and intuitive knowledge only is forced to make room for the younger man, of less experience, perhaps, but who modernizes his work by the jurisdiction of figures alone.
    Clinton Edgar Woods

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