Recognize in a sentence as a verb

If it's not, train yourself to recognize it.

To live with them and not let them win shows a kind of strength that most people are sadly unable to recognize.

" It means you don't believe that the government should recognize same sex marriages as marriages.

The key take away from this article is not to build your app in J2ME but to recognize how big the world is outside of America.

It takes a lot to recognize when you or someone you know has a problem, even when in retrospect it's blindingly obvious.

Virtual monopolies need to recognize this, that they have a responsibility to the users.

At what point do we recognize a disorder in a child who is unnaturally compliant and obedient?

Anyone who has worked in enough office environments for a while will recognize that the "best" environment is a flexible one.

I recognize that sounds petulant, but back to the site in the first paragraph - a lot of people stopped posting because so much did not survive the great purges that went on.

I also point out to women when they're putting up with sexist behavior, because it's so ingrained in our culture that too few even recognize it properly.

You were fortunate to recognize that MongoDB was the wrong tool for your job, and lucky to be able to move to Postgres instead of continuing to throw your time and effort away.

I don't really get this T, i understand its going for minimalism, but would someone who frequents HN recognize it if they did not already know its affiliation?

Demand response and efficient appliances are actually in the interest of utilities, and they do recognize this.

Dear fellow HN dwellers,If you read the writings of the Guide's author and do not recognize that it is misogynistic and advocating sexual assault, you have a problem.

Unfortunately, Google's executives seemed to lack the insight to recognize an obviously horrible idea as horrible.

What they don't recognize is when drug makers trivially re-formulate their drug upon patent expiration in such a way that the old medicine cannot be made generically without also infringing on the new patent.

The failure to recognize the good in America, indeed the many ways in which it still leads the world, and see the difference between a free country with perhaps too-strict sentencing guidelines and one which enslaves and kills its people for purely political transgressions, is indicative of the erosion of one axis of our moral compass and the early sign of a culture and a nation turning in on itself and destroying itself.

Recognize definitions

verb

accept (someone) to be what is claimed or accept his power and authority; "The Crown Prince was acknowledged as the true heir to the throne"; "We do not recognize your gods"

See also: acknowledge recognise know

verb

be fully aware or cognizant of

See also: recognise realize realise agnize agnise

verb

detect with the senses; "The fleeing convicts were picked out of the darkness by the watchful prison guards"; "I can't make out the faces in this photograph"

See also: spot recognise distinguish discern

verb

perceive to be the same

See also: recognise

verb

grant credentials to; "The Regents officially recognized the new educational institution"; "recognize an academic degree"

See also: accredit recognise

verb

express greetings upon meeting someone

See also: greet recognise

verb

express obligation, thanks, or gratitude for; "We must acknowledge the kindness she showed towards us"

See also: acknowledge recognise

verb

exhibit recognition for (an antigen or a substrate)

verb

show approval or appreciation of; "My work is not recognized by anybody!"; "The best student was recognized by the Dean"

See also: recognise