noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
tacit
▪
We now consider what they imply for the analysis of tacit collusion .
▪
In respect of tacit collusion there is far less clarity.
▪
There will always be the problem of trying to infer whether apparently tacit collusion really was well-concealed explicit collusion.
▪
Media companies may operate tacit or explicit collusion just as easily as politicians.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
Collusion at the company breeds collusion in the family, which breeds collusion at the company-his and hers.
▪
A sense of complicity is established between the artist and the single viewer, a collusion excluding all other visitors.
▪
But he only looked at her blankly, and gave no rueful half-smile in collusion .
▪
Chandler convicts himself of collusion as well: the novel focuses on the profits the Sternwoods have made in oil.
▪
In fact, the church will be in collusion with evil if it does not stand on the side of the victim.
▪
The manufacturers of tea and soap are in collusion .
▪
This then ensures that fraud can not be committed without the collusion of at least two individuals.