recognition

recognition
noun
1 remembering/identifying sb/sth
ADJECTIVE
immediate, instant
early, prompt

the early recognition of a disease

dawning
brand, name

One of the main goals of marketing is name recognition.

word

a test of children's word recognition

character, face, fingerprint, handwriting, speech, text, voice
automatic, computer

the automatic recognition of handwriting by computer

… OF RECOGNITION
flicker, sign

She stared directly at the witness but he did not show a flicker of recognition (= he did not show that he recognized her).

VERB + RECOGNITION
show
avoid

He pulled the hood of his cloak over his head to avoid recognition.

allow, facilitate

The monitoring system allows recognition of pollution hot spots.

RECOGNITION + VERB
dawn

Recognition slowly dawned, and I remembered her from my college days.

RECOGNITION + NOUN
software, system, technology
PREPOSITION
beyond (all) recognition (figurative)

Many of those interviewed said their job had changed beyond recognition (= changed completely) over the past five years.

out of (all) recognition (figurative)

The equipment and methods of production have improved out of all recognition (= greatly improved).

without recognition

He looked up, glanced at them without recognition, and went on his way.

PHRASES
recognition in sb's eyes

There was no recognition in his eyes (= he did not look as if he recognized her).

2 accepting that sth exists/is true; public praise/reward
ADJECTIVE
full
special

The judges selected three projects for special recognition.

appropriate, due, proper, well-deserved
insufficient
greater, growing, increasing

There needs to be a greater recognition of corporate crime as a social problem.

clear, explicit, overt
implicit
apparent
positive
equal

equal recognition for the work women do

mutual
immediate, instant
belated, overdue

The award is being made in belated recognition of her services to the industry.

Recognition of his talent was long overdue.

individual, personal

personal recognition for your achievements

general, universal, wide, widespread

The young talent at the club deserves wider recognition.

international, national, worldwide
public, social
professional
diplomatic
formal, legal, legislative, official
federal, government, state
de facto

Twelve states have accorded de facto recognition to the new regime.

VERB + RECOGNITION
achieve, attain, earn sb, gain, garner (esp. AmE), get, obtain, receive, win

His recitals have earned him recognition as a talented performer.

deserve, merit
require

Both of these perspectives are valid and require recognition.

imply

They claim that signature of the peace accord did not imply recognition of the state's sovereignty.

ask for, call for, demand, request, seek
apply for
qualify for

to qualify for UN recognition as an International Biosphere Reserve

accord sb/sth, give sb/sth, grant sb/sth
deny sb/sth, refuse sb/sth
RECOGNITION + VERB
come

Official recognition of the change came fast.

PREPOSITION
in recognition of

an award in recognition of his outstanding work

without recognition

She has worked actively but without recognition.

recognition as

a country that has long sought recognition as a major power

recognition by, recognition from

recognition by his superiors of the service he had performed

recognition for

They received recognition for their 20-year commitment to safety at sea.

PHRASES
a lack of recognition
recognition of the importance of sth, recognition of the need for sth
a struggle for recognition

Collocations dictionary. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую
Synonyms:

Look at other dictionaries:

  • recognition — rec‧og‧ni‧tion [ˌrekəgˈnɪʆn] noun [uncountable] 1. MARKETING when people know who a person is or what something is, or know something about them as soon as they see them or hear their name: • We are bigger than most companies and our name… …   Financial and business terms

  • Recognition — (re+cognition) is a process that occurs in thinking when some event, process, pattern, or object recurrs . Thus in order for something to be recognized, it must be familiar. This recurrence allows the recognizer to more properly react, survival… …   Wikipedia

  • récognition — [ rekɔgnisjɔ̃; rekɔɲisjɔ̃ ] n. f. • 1842; « examen » 1771; « confession » 1430; lat. recognitio « revue, inspection » ♦ Philos. Acte de l esprit qui reconnaît (une chose) en identifiant. ● recognition nom féminin Littéraire. Reconnaissance,… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • recognition — rec·og·ni·tion /ˌre kəg ni shən/ n 1: the act, process, or fact of recognizing 2: the state of being recognized Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 …   Law dictionary

  • Recognition — Rec og*ni tion (r[e^]k [o^]g*n[i^]sh [u^]n), n. [L. recognitio: cf. F. recognition. See {Recognizance}.] The act of recognizing, or the state of being recognized; acknowledgment; formal avowal; knowledge confessed or avowed; notice. [1913… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • recognition — recognition, identification, assimilation, apperception are comparable when they designate a form of cognition which relates a perception of something new to knowledge already acquired. Recognition implies that the thing now perceived (as by… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • recognition — recognition; un·recognition; …   English syllables

  • recognition — [n1] identification, acknowledgment acceptance, acknowledging, admission, allowance, apperception, appreciation, apprehending, assimilation, avowal, awareness, cognizance, concession, confession, consciousness, detection, discovery, double take* …   New thesaurus

  • recognition — ► NOUN 1) the action of recognizing or the process of being recognized. 2) appreciation or acknowledgement. 3) (also diplomatic recognition) formal acknowledgement by a country that another political entity fulfils the conditions of statehood …   English terms dictionary

  • recognition — [rek΄əg nish′ən] n. [L recognitio < recognitus, pp. of recognoscere: see RECOGNIZANCE] 1. a) a recognizing or being recognized; acknowledgment; admission, as of a fact b) acknowledgment and approval, gratitude, etc. [in recognition of her… …   English World dictionary

  • Recognition — (v. lat.), 1) Wiedererkennung, Anerkennung; 2) die vor Gericht od. einem Notar geschehene Anerkennung einer Sache od. Person für dasjenige, für was sie ausgegeben worden ist; im Civilproceß bes. von der Anerkennung von Urkunden gebraucht, s. u.… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”