designative 的 2 个定义
des·ig·nat·ed, des·ig·nat·ing.
- to mark or point out; indicate; show; specify.
- to denote; indicate; signify.
- to name; entitle; style.
- to nominate or select for a duty, office, purpose, etc.; appoint; assign.
- named or selected for an office, position, etc., but not yet installed: ambassador-designate.
designative 近义词
designatory
designative 的近义词 9 个
更多designative例句
- This could include reserving vaccines in under-resourced racial and ethnic minority communities for local residents and designating senior hours for those 65 and older.
- You’ll need to charge and connect your own power bank, which can easily slide into the designated built-in pocket.
- Teams will still have the ability to sign up to three high-priced players, known as designated players, beyond typical salary restrictions.
- The sickliest one, whom I designated a female and named Truffles, couldn’t crack the shells.
- The bill specifically designates English-learners, migrant students, homeless students, low-income students, foster youth and disengaged students as those eligible to receive support.
- Lo thinks the local government should designate one or two protest sites and leave the demonstrators alone.
- Under the law government branches other than the defense ministry would have the power to designate information as state secrets.
- It was the first time in history that the Senate had sustained a filibuster against a cabinet secretary-designate.
- The president alone should not be able to designate a U.S. person as an enemy combatant and then order operatives to kill him.
- "Secretary-Designate Hagel is focused on the work he's got to do," the Democratic official said.
- In marking the public lands of the western territories by statute monuments must designate the corners of the tract.
- It may also be used to designate simply a clever man, who is neither very good nor very wicked.
- But could any dependent being fully designate its glorious origin, and infinite Surety?
- Mme. Falcon has given, in the provinces, her name to designate tragic "sopranos."
- The religious partisans generally designate the incredulous as libertines.