recognize 的定义
rec·og·nized, rec·og·niz·ing.
- to identify as something or someone previously seen, known, etc.: He had changed so much that one could scarcely recognize him.
- to identify from knowledge of appearance or characteristics: I recognized him from the description. They recognized him as a fraud.
- to perceive as existing or true; realize: to be the first to recognize a fact.
- to acknowledge as the person entitled to speak at a particular time: The Speaker recognized the congressman from Maine.
- to acknowledge formally as entitled to treatment as a political unit: The United States promptly recognized Israel.
- to acknowledge or accept formally a specified factual or legal situation: to recognize a successful revolutionary regime as the de facto government of the country.
- to acknowledge or treat as valid: to recognize a claim.
- to acknowledge acquaintance with, as by a greeting, handshake, etc.
- to show appreciation of, as by some reward, public honor, or the like.
- Law. to acknowledge as one's own.
- Biochemistry, Immunology. to bind with, cleave, or otherwise react to as a result of fitting its molecular shape or a portion of its shape.
recognize 近义词
identify
acknowledge, understand;
更多recognize例句
- To me, the broader lesson from that is recognizing what the issue is.
- Maybe by the next election, computers will be better at recognizing the handiwork of other automated manipulators.
- The names mentioned above are just a smattering of the people recognized on the list.
- “The only way to safeguard the sector is for the government to step in and recognize that fashion and its supply chain is a truly strategic industry for the country, something Italy excels at globally,” he says.
- We as a community need to recognize their power and strength so we have to affirm our family.
- We have also seen countries like Sweden recognize Palestine as a state.
- But few of us would recognize the name of Dietrich von Hildebrand, a German philosopher-turned-outspoken Nazi antagonist.
- I recognize my inability to truly understand these events in the same context or view these events through exactly the same prism.
- The trick is to be able to recognize the right one when it comes along.
- After all, our bodies are hard wired to recognize the difference between “me” and “not me.”
- I assure you, no matter how beautifully we play any piece, the minute Liszt plays it, you would scarcely recognize it!
- I hope the French Government will recognize this dashing stroke of d'Amade's by something more solid than a thank you.
- He spoke Urdu exceedingly well, and it was difficult in the gloom to recognize him as a European.
- In estivo-autumnal malaria the gametes take distinctive ovoid and crescentic forms, and are not difficult to recognize.
- The narrow individualism of the nineteenth century refused to recognize the social duty of supporting somebody else's grandmother.