Betekenis van:
commemorate

to commemorate
Werkwoord
  • memoreren; niet vergeten
  • call to remembrance; keep alive the memory of someone or something, as in a ceremony

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

to commemorate
Werkwoord
  • protocolleren
  • be or provide a memorial to a person or an event
"This sculpture commemorates the victims of the concentration camps"

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

Hyponiemen

to commemorate
Werkwoord
    • mark by some ceremony or observation

    Synoniemen

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. They were erected to commemorate a certain event or to tell an ancestral legend.
    2. This speech by Ronald Reagan was made to commemorate the death of the astronauts in a space shuttle accident.
    3. Commemorative coins are specific coins intended for circulation where the regular national design is replaced by a different national design in order to commemorate a specific subject.
    4. The latter usually commemorate an event or a personality and are issued at face value for a limited period and in limited quantities.
    5. The latter usually commemorate an event or a personality and are issued at face value for a limited period and in limited quantities. ‘Coin-issuing entities’
    6. Presentations in the United States of America in 2005 by the Spanish Riding School in Vienna to commemorate the 60th anniversary of General George Patton’s rescue of the Austrian Lipizzaner
    7. Issues of commemorative euro coins intended for circulation showing a different national design from that of the regular euro coins intended for circulation should only commemorate subjects of major national or European relevance.
    8. Issues of commemorative euro coins intended for circulation should only commemorate subjects of major national or European relevance, since such coins are intended for circulation throughout the euro-area.
    9. The Ivo Van Damme Memorial, part of the Golden League, has a special general resonance in Belgium given that it is an international highlevel athletics event held in Belgium to commemorate a great Belgian athlete and combining sport and music, so it is very popular with the general public.
    10. Issues of commemorative euro coins intended for circulation should only commemorate subjects of major national or European relevance, since such coins are intended for circulation throughout the euro-area. Less important subjects should rather be celebrated by way of issuing euro collector coins, which are not intended for circulation and which must be easily distinguishable from euro coins intended for circulation.
    11. Euro circulation coins include coins with a special finish or quality and/or packaging and commemorative euro circulation coins. The latter usually commemorate an event or a personality and are issued at face value for a limited period and in limited quantities. ‘Coin-issuing entities’
    12. Euro circulation coins include coins with a special finish or quality and/or packaging and commemorative euro circulation coins. The latter usually commemorate an event or a personality and are issued at face value for a limited period and in limited quantities.
    13. Commemorative euro coins intended for circulation collectively issued by all participating Member States as defined in Article 1 of Regulation (EC) No 974/98 (hereafter the ‘participating Member States’) should only commemorate subjects of the highest European relevance and their issuance should be endorsed by the Council.
    14. From 2004 onwards, and subject to certain limitations, Member States are allowed, in order to commemorate a specific event or personality, to issue commemorative euro circulation coins bearing a national design which is different from the normal euro circulation coin design in line with the Commission Recommendation 2003/734/EC of 29 September 2003 on a common practice for changes to the design of national obverse sides of euro circulation coins [3].
    15. means euro coins defined as having legal tender status throughout the euro area in accordance with Council Regulation (EC) No 975/98 of 3 May 1998 on denominations and technical specifications of euro coins intended for circulation [2] (i.e. for the first series of euro coins as launched on 1 January 2002 EUR 0,01, EUR 0,02, EUR 0,05, EUR 0,10, EUR 0,20, EUR 0,50, EUR 1 and EUR 2). Euro circulation coins include coins with a special finish or quality and/or packaging and commemorative euro circulation coins. The latter usually commemorate an event or a personality and are issued at face value for a limited period and in limited quantities. ‘Coin-issuing entities’