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characterize
[kar-ik-tuh-rahyz]
verb (used with object)
to mark or distinguish as a characteristic; be a characteristic of.
Rich metaphors characterize his poetry.
to describe the character or individual quality of.
He characterized her in a few well-chosen words.
to attribute character to.
to characterize him as a coward.
characterize
/ ˈkærɪktəˌraɪz /
verb
to be a characteristic of
loneliness characterized the place
to distinguish or mark as a characteristic
to describe or portray the character of
Other Word Forms
- characterizable adjective
- characterizer noun
- mischaracterize verb (used with object)
- recharacterize verb (used with object)
Word History and Origins
Origin of characterize1
Example Sentences
The habeas corpus complaint repeatedly characterized a teenage Fiorella as a shy, quiet child who was teased by peers for being “slow.”
“Tell the brother he can stay, but he’s working for us,” Boy Kavalier tells a lackey, characterizing that instruction as “just a reminder that it’s my world. He just lives in it.”
This process is characterized as a deliberate attempt to install loyalists who couldn’t survive the constitutional confirmation process, thereby undermining democratic checks and balances.
The media’s breathless coverage of potential “deals” mirrors the same empty diplomatic theater that has characterized Russian negotiations for decades, where verbal promises mean nothing and compromise is viewed as a zero-sum game.
The Gaza Health Ministry condemned the attacks, characterizing them as “a continuation of the systematic destruction of the health system and the continuation of genocide.”
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