identify, to pick out (transitive) to recognise (reflexive with się) to recognise oneself (reflexive with się) to recognise each other adjective rozpoznawalny...
identify, to pick out (transitive) to recognise (reflexive with się) to recognise oneself (reflexive with się) to recognise each other adjective rozpoznawalny...
IPA(key): /ˈɡlɔːrifiːən/ glorifien To compliment, acclaim, or recognise someone To devote oneself to or to worship someone. To empower; to grant a quality...
also: وب From Aramaic [Term?]. The feminine gender of the suffix was not recognised by the Arabs and the borrowings are exclusively masculines. وت • (-ūt)...
esteem oneself incorrectly; have a false or exaggerated opinion of oneself or one's position. (transitive, UK dialectal) To fail to recognise or identify...
participle kendt) know (be acquainted or familiar with) (passive voice) recognise as one’s own (with the preposition ved) Inflection of kende en kende a...
part of the town, where Scrooge had never penetrated before, although he recognised its situation, and its bad repute. 2024 September 30, Peter Eavis, “Counteroffers...
lack of it in the spelling may be simply because the relation was not recognised or not considered certain. It is also possible, however, that some early...
think”), Norwegian Nynorsk tenkja (“to think”), Icelandic þekkja (“to know, recognise, identify, perceive”), Latin tongeō (“know”). think (third-person singular...
re it is a recognised fact: inter omnes constat I have not made up my mind: mihi non constat (with indirect question) to contradict oneself, be inconsistent:...