Use "characterise" in a sentence

1. Know how to characterise urban Ambiances.

2. Therefore, we aimed to characterise the Attendances to an…

3. Characterise Past participle: Characterised Gerund: characterising Imperative Present Preterite Present Continuous Present Perfect Past Continuous Past Perfect Future Future Perfect Future Continuous Present Perfect Continuous Future Perfect Continuous Past Perfect Continuous Conditional Past Conditional Imperative characterise characterise Present I

4. Would you characterise the Copenhagen meeting as heading for a failure?

5. TLC, atomic absorption, and electronic spectroscopies were used to characterise the reaction products.

6. Synonyms for Conventionalize include stereotype, pigeonhole, typecast, categorise, categorize, standardise, standardize, brand, cast and characterise

7. Characteristically translation in English - French Reverso dictionary, see also 'characteristic',characterisation',characterise',character', examples, definition

8. Antonyms for Antithesize include represent, symbolise, symbolize, embody, typify, characterise, characterize, demonstrate, epitomise and epitomize

9. This study aimed to characterise the heat stress abatement strategies and microclimate within SDF Cowsheds fro …

10. To adequately characterise the new materials and products, scientists developed accelerated ageing tests and test protocols.

11. to characterise the accounting holding by reference to the main elements of its factors of production

12. 11 What is interesting is that the insect imagery used to characterise the villeins is continued here.

13. Global coagulation Assays can be used to characterise some haemostatic disorders and to monitor the effects of treatment

14. As verbs the difference between characterized and Characterised is that characterized is (characterize) while Characterised is (characterise)

15. Due mainly to its glassy amorphous state it is difficult to define critical points and consequently characterise ceramic glazes.

16. ‘Environmentalists tended to characterise Aboriginal Australians as icons of true belonging, role models, holders of superior spiritual knowledge, the real Autochthons.’

17. Anglo-American style elements characterise the hotel - informal, relaxed and easy going. Our motto "Feel Good", invites you to relax after a hard day.

18. Most granitic Batholiths contain plutons which are composed of low-variance mineral assemblages amenable to quantification of the P – conditions that characterise emplacement

19. The objective of this review was to characterise the diversity and relative importance of common infectious Aetiologies of AUFI in South and Southeast Asia

20. The Minor Actinide laboratory has been especially conceived to manufacture and characterise the most suitable materials for the transmutation of long-lived radioactive elements.

21. The main objective of this research is to characterise the Anthophilous insects (primarily bees), observe foraging on "Clemson spineless" variety of A.

22. In this regard, researchers needed to prepare and characterise actomyosin networks, construct optically-based active microrheology setups, and implement relevant analytical software and methodology.

23. The local chemical composition was analysed by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy while electron back-scattering diffraction analysis was used to characterise texture and grain size.

24. Many results, reported in bibliography and completed by the authors, show that the determination of this single coefficient is not sufficient to characterise the activity of the admixture.

25. The Archbishops urged legislators “to consider this bill in the light of values and principles we would wish to characterise relationships across these islands long after the transition period”.

26. The equipment was used to characterise various anchor groups as alternatives to thiols and with the goal of enhancing electronic coupling at the molecule–metal interface to reduce resistance to current flow.

27. This study aimed to characterise the heat stress abatement strategies and microclimate within SDF Cowsheds from four typical dairy regions of Vietnam (south lowland, south highland, north lowland and north

28. Predicting the strength of these concretes induces the engineer to characterise the mineral, admixtures: ordinarily, a single coefficient is used, calculated with an empirical law like Bolomey's or Abrams' formulas.

29. The eight Beatitudes are the teachings of Jesus during his Sermon on the Mount (Beatitudes Mountain) in which he describes the attitudes and actions that should characterise his followers and disciples.

30. The aim of this study was to further characterise the activity as seed treatments of five actinomycete and four Trichoderma strains that in a previous screening under controlled conditions had shown promising activity against Tilletia tritici.

31. Although all XRF techniques are capable of only total elemental analysis, with some sample preparation, Clora, Clora with Accu-flow, Clora 2XP, and Sindie +Cl can also be used to characterise inorganic and organic Chlorides in crude oil.

32. 'Spectral efficiency` (5) is a figure of merit parametrised to characterise the efficiency of transmission system which uses complex modulation schemes such as QAM (quadrature amplitude modulation), Trellis coding, QPSK (Q-phased shift key), etc.

33. In 2009 the NW and SE flanks of Anton Dohrn Seamount were surveyed using multibeam echosounder and video ground-truthing to characterise megabenthic biological assemblages (Biotopes) and assess those which clearly adhere to the definition of Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems, for use in habitat mapping

34. Researchers were able to identify 11 different types of vesicle-like structures and developed protocols to characterise them.A co-culture was set up between the most common environmental amoebae and a genetically modified strain of Legionella pneumophila which glows green, thereby facilitating its detection.

35. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Characterize char‧ac‧ter‧ize (also characterise British English) / ˈkærəktəraɪz / W3 verb [transitive] 1 DESCRIBE to describe the qualities of someone or something in a particular way SYN portray Characterize somebody as (being) something The group was Characterized as being well

36. Characterize: 1 v be characteristic of “What Characterizes a Venetian painting?” Synonyms: characterise Types: individuate give individual character to define determine the nature of Type of: differentiate , distinguish , mark be a distinctive feature, attribute, or trait; sometimes in a very positive sense v describe or portray the character

37. The Beatitudes are considered by the Church, to contain the most concise summary of the spiritual life of man. The eight Beatitudes are the teachings of Jesus during his Sermon on the Mount (Beatitudes Mountain) in which he describes the attitudes and actions that should characterise his followers and disciples

38. This decision will help India to deal more effectively with the problems of sedimentation in its future projects as the NE has confirmed India's design of large bottom outlets (sluice spillway) as the most important technique to be employed in managing the high volumes of sediment which characterise the Himalayan Rivers.

39. ‘It's a word which shows a feeble mind and a tendency to Brutishness.’ ‘They despair of the moral decline and the ugly Brutishness that characterise much of urban Britain.’ ‘The former, who showed no mercy to those who were physically less endowed than them, sowed the seeds of injustice and naked Brutishness that stalk the country

40. Characterize [sth] as [sth], also UK: characterise [sth] as [sb] vtr + prep (depict, portray [sth]) definire [qlcs] in un modo, descrivere [qlcs] come [qlcs], caratterizzare [qlcs] come [qlcs] vtr verbo transitivo o transitivo pronominale: Verbo che richiede un complemento oggetto: "Lava la mela prima di mangiarla" - "Non mi aspettavo un

41. 26 In reply, the applicant submits that those documents are not new items of evidence which alter the framework of the dispute, but only three-dimensional representations of the designs at issue, which were produced for the sole purpose of making it easier to visualise the fundamental differences which characterise those designs and give rise, on the part of the informed user, to a different general impression.