释义 |
characterisechar‧ac‧ter‧ise /ˈkærəktəraɪz/ verb  VERB TABLEcharacterise |
Present | I, you, we, they | characterise | | he, she, it | characterises | Past | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | characterised | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have characterised | | he, she, it | has characterised | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had characterised | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will characterise | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have characterised |
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Present | I | am characterising | | he, she, it | is characterising | | you, we, they | are characterising | Past | I, he, she, it | was characterising | | you, we, they | were characterising | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have been characterising | | he, she, it | has been characterising | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had been characterising | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will be characterising | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have been characterising |
- Humiliation, torture and murder, to an obscene degree, characterise the region's history.
- In six years she had never been able to cultivate that devil-may-care attitude that seemed to characterise the gentleman at the Feathers.
- Open mountain heights and gently sloping valleys characterise the mid-section reaching nearly 1500 metres in the High Feldberg.
- Our concern is particularly with the processes which drive and characterise those relationships.
- The power of the officials stems from their understanding the processes and procedures that characterise the bureaucratic organisation.
- Unix Expo delivered what it said it would, counting a record 28,722 attendees and characterising them as primarily corporate buyers.
- Very roughly we can characterise perhaps four main axes to this debate.
- We can characterise this as rule by the non-elected with power in the hands of a bureaucratic elite.
a British spelling of characterize |