Betekenis van:
characterize

to characterize
Werkwoord
  • aanduiden als; werkloosheidsuitkering hebben; kwalificeren
  • describe or portray the character or the qualities or peculiarities of
"You can characterize his behavior as that of an egotist"
"This poem can be characterized as a lament for a dead lover"

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

Hyponiemen

to characterize
Werkwoord
    • be characteristic of
    "What characterizes a Venetian painting?"

    Synoniemen

    Hyperoniemen

    Hyponiemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. If you had to characterize your wife in three words, which ones would you pick?
    2. Drunken fights and more drunken sex characterize their excuse for a relationship.
    3. He often adopts the behaviors and speech patterns that characterize the advantaged.
    4. To one of the head psychologists, the depression criteria didn't quite characterize this group of girls.
    5. Is this kid autistic or does he have ADHD? His behavior is hard to characterize either way.
    6. Equipment, as follows, specially designed to characterize mirrors for ring "laser" gyros:
    7. Equipment specially designed to characterize mirrors for ring "laser" gyros, as follows:
    8. Equipment, as follows, specially designed to characterize mirrors for ring "laser" gyros: N.B.: SEE ALSO 7B102.
    9. The values that characterize these two effects are called the physical and the electrical response time which represent an individual filter for each type of opacimeter.
    10. Member States shall take the measures necessary for the protection of the deep-sea sensitive habitats in the areas referred to in paragraph 1 and in particular shall ensure that these areas are protected from the impacts of any other activity than fishing activity jeopardizing the conservation of the features that characterize these particular habitats.
    11. The Court of Justice confirmed further that Article 2(e) of the Euratom Treaty gives the Community the task of making certain, by appropriate supervision, that nuclear materials are not diverted to purposes other than those for which they are intended, without making any distinction with regard to the nature of such diversions and the circumstances in which they might take place and finally that the very expression ‘safeguards’ which the Treaty uses to characterize the provisions of chapter VII has a wider scope than the mere substitution of a different destination for the one declared by a user of nuclear materials.