recalcitrance | (noun) the trait of being unmanageable | Synonyms: recalcitrancy, refractoriness, unmanageableness |
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recalcitrancy | (noun) the trait of being unmanageable | Synonyms: recalcitrance, refractoriness, unmanageableness |
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recalcitrant | (adjective) marked by stubborn resistance to authority | - |
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(adjective) stubbornly resistant to authority or control | Synonyms: fractious, refractory |
recalcitrate | (verb) show strong objection or repugnance; manifest vigorous opposition or resistance; be obstinately disobedient | - |
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recalculate | (verb) calculate anew | - |
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recalculation | (noun) the act of calculating again (usually to eliminate errors or to include additional data) | - |
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recall | (noun) the act of removing an official by petition | - |
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(noun) the process of remembering (especially the process of recovering information by mental effort) | Synonyms: recollection, reminiscence |
(noun) a call to return | - |
(noun) a bugle call that signals troops to return | - |
(noun) a request by the manufacturer of a defective product to return the product (as for replacement or repair) | Synonyms: callback |
(verb) recall knowledge from memory; have a recollection | Synonyms: call back, call up, recollect, remember, retrieve, think |
(verb) cause one's (or someone else's) thoughts or attention to return from a reverie or digression | - |
(verb) go back to something earlier | Synonyms: come back, hark back, return |
(verb) summon to return | Synonyms: call back |
(verb) cause to be returned | Synonyms: call back, call in, withdraw |
(verb) make unavailable; bar from sale or distribution | - |
(verb) bring to mind | Synonyms: echo |
recant | (verb) formally reject or disavow a formerly held belief, usually under pressure | Synonyms: abjure, forswear, resile, retract |
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recantation | (noun) a disavowal or taking back of a previous assertion | Synonyms: abjuration, retraction |
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recap | (noun) a summary at the end that repeats the substance of a longer discussion | Synonyms: recapitulation, review |
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(noun) a used automobile tire that has been remolded to give it new treads | Synonyms: retread |
(verb) summarize briefly | Synonyms: recapitulate |
recapitulate | (verb) summarize briefly | Synonyms: recap |
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(verb) repeat an earlier theme of a composition | Synonyms: repeat, reprise, reprize |
(verb) repeat stages of evolutionary development during the embryonic phase of life | - |
recapitulation | (noun) (music) the repetition of themes introduced earlier (especially when one is composing the final part of a movement) | - |
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(noun) a summary at the end that repeats the substance of a longer discussion | Synonyms: recap, review |
(noun) (music) the section of a composition or movement (especially in sonata form) in which musical themes that were introduced earlier are repeated | - |
(noun) emergence during embryonic development of various characters or structures that appeared during the evolutionary history of the strain or species | Synonyms: palingenesis |
recapture | (noun) the act of taking something back | Synonyms: retaking |
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(noun) a legal seizure by the government of profits beyond a fixed amount | - |
(verb) capture again | Synonyms: retake |
(verb) take up anew | - |
(verb) experience anew | - |
(verb) take back by force, as after a battle | Synonyms: retake |
recast | (verb) cast again, in a different role | - |
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(verb) cast again | Synonyms: remold, remould |
(verb) cast or model anew | Synonyms: reforge, remodel |
recasting | (noun) changing a particular word or phrase | Synonyms: rephrasing, rewording |
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recce | (noun) reconnaissance (by shortening) | Synonyms: recco, reccy |
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recco | (noun) reconnaissance (by shortening) | Synonyms: recce, reccy |
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reccy | (noun) reconnaissance (by shortening) | Synonyms: recce, recco |
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recede | (verb) become faint or more distant | - |
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(verb) retreat | Synonyms: drop off, fall back, fall behind |
(verb) pull back or move away or backward | Synonyms: draw back, move back, pull away, pull back, retire, retreat, withdraw |
receding | (adjective) (of a hairline e.g.) moving slowly back | - |
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(noun) the act of becoming more distant | Synonyms: recession |
(noun) a slow or gradual disappearance | Synonyms: fadeout |
receipt | (noun) the act of receiving | Synonyms: reception |
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(noun) an acknowledgment (usually tangible) that payment has been made | - |
(verb) mark or stamp as paid | - |
(verb) report the receipt of | Synonyms: acknowledge |
receipts | (noun) the entire amount of income before any deductions are made | Synonyms: gross, revenue |
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receivable | (adjective) awaiting payment | - |
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receivables | (noun) money that you currently expect to receive from notes or accounts | - |
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receive | (verb) convert into sounds or pictures | - |
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(verb) receive a specified treatment (abstract) | Synonyms: find, get, incur, obtain |
(verb) accept as true or valid | - |
(verb) regard favorably or with disapproval | - |
(verb) bid welcome to; greet upon arrival | Synonyms: welcome |
(verb) partake of the Holy Eucharist sacrament | - |
(verb) express willingness to have in one's home or environs | Synonyms: invite, take in |
(verb) register (perceptual input) | Synonyms: pick up |
(verb) go through (mental or physical states or experiences) | Synonyms: experience, get, have |
(verb) receive as a retribution or punishment | Synonyms: get |
(verb) get something; come into possession of | Synonyms: have |
(verb) have or give a reception | - |
(verb) experience as a reaction | Synonyms: encounter, meet |
received | (adjective) conforming to the established language usage of educated native speakers | Synonyms: standard |
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(adjective) widely accepted as true or worthy | - |
receiver | (noun) set that receives radio or tv signals | Synonyms: receiving system |
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(noun) earphone that converts electrical signals into sounds | Synonyms: telephone receiver |
(noun) a person who receives something | Synonyms: recipient |
(noun) (law) a person (usually appointed by a court of law) who liquidates assets or preserves them for the benefit of affected parties | Synonyms: liquidator |
(noun) a football player who catches (or is supposed to catch) a forward pass | Synonyms: pass catcher, pass receiver |
(noun) the tennis player who receives the serve | - |
receivership | (noun) the office of a receiver | - |
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(noun) a court action that places property under the control of a receiver during litigation so that it can be preserved for the benefit of all | - |
(noun) the state of property that is in the hands of a receiver | - |
recency | (noun) a time immediately before the present | Synonyms: recentness |
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(noun) the property of having happened or appeared not long ago | Synonyms: recentness |
recent | (adjective) new | - |
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(adjective) of the immediate past or just previous to the present time | Synonyms: late |
recently | (adverb) in the recent past | Synonyms: late, lately, latterly, of late |
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recentness | (noun) a time immediately before the present | Synonyms: recency |
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(noun) the property of having happened or appeared not long ago | Synonyms: recency |
receptacle | (noun) a container that is used to put or keep things in | - |
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(noun) an electrical (or electronic) fitting that is connected to a source of power and equipped to receive an insert | - |
(noun) enlarged tip of a stem that bears the floral parts | - |
reception | (noun) the act of receiving | Synonyms: receipt |
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(noun) (American football) the act of catching a pass in football | - |
(noun) quality or fidelity of a received broadcast | - |
(noun) the manner in which something is greeted | Synonyms: response |
(noun) a formal party of people; as after a wedding | - |
receptionist | (noun) a secretary whose main duty is to answer the telephone and receive visitors | - |
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receptive | (adjective) ready or willing to receive favorably | Synonyms: open |
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(adjective) able to absorb liquid (not repellent) | - |
(adjective) of a nerve fiber or impulse originating outside and passing toward the central nervous system | Synonyms: centripetal, sensory |
(adjective) open to arguments, ideas, or change | - |
receptively | (adverb) in a receptive manner | - |
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receptiveness | (noun) willingness or readiness to receive (especially impressions or ideas) | Synonyms: openness, receptivity |
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receptivity | (noun) willingness or readiness to receive (especially impressions or ideas) | Synonyms: openness, receptiveness |
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receptor | (noun) an organ having nerve endings (in the skin or viscera or eye or ear or nose or mouth) that respond to stimulation | Synonyms: sense organ, sensory receptor |
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(noun) a cellular structure that is postulated to exist in order to mediate between a chemical agent that acts on nervous tissue and the physiological response | - |
recess | (noun) a pause from doing something (as work) | Synonyms: break, respite, time out |
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(noun) an enclosure that is set back or indented | Synonyms: niche |
(noun) an arm off of a larger body of water (often between rocky headlands) | Synonyms: inlet |
(noun) a small concavity | Synonyms: corner, niche, recession |
(noun) a state of abeyance or suspended business | Synonyms: deferral |
(verb) close at the end of a session | Synonyms: adjourn, break up |
(verb) make a recess in | - |
(verb) put into a recess | - |
recessed | (adjective) resembling an alcove | - |
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(adjective) having a sunken area | Synonyms: deep-set, sunken |
recession | (noun) the act of becoming more distant | Synonyms: receding |
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(noun) the act of ceding back | Synonyms: ceding back |
(noun) the withdrawal of the clergy and choir from the chancel to the vestry at the end of a church service | Synonyms: recessional |
(noun) a small concavity | Synonyms: corner, niche, recess |
(noun) the state of the economy declines; a widespread decline in the GDP and employment and trade lasting from six months to a year | - |
recessional | (adjective) of or relating to receding | - |
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(noun) a hymn that is sung at the end of a service as the clergy and choir withdraw | - |
(noun) the withdrawal of the clergy and choir from the chancel to the vestry at the end of a church service | Synonyms: recession |
recessionary | (adjective) of or pertaining to a recession | Synonyms: recessive |
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recessive | (adjective) (of genes) producing its characteristic phenotype only when its allele is identical | - |
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(adjective) of or pertaining to a recession | Synonyms: recessionary |
(noun) an allele that produces its characteristic phenotype only when its paired allele is identical | Synonyms: recessive allele |
recharge | (verb) charge anew | - |
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(verb) load anew | Synonyms: reload |
rechargeable | (adjective) capable of being recharged | - |
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rechauffe | (noun) warmed leftovers | - |
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recherche | (adjective) lavishly elegant and refined | Synonyms: exquisite |
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recidivate | (verb) go back to bad behavior | Synonyms: fall back, lapse, regress, relapse, retrogress |
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recidivism | (noun) habitual relapse into crime | - |
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recidivist | (noun) someone who lapses into previous undesirable patterns of behavior | Synonyms: backslider, reversionist |
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(noun) someone who is repeatedly arrested for criminal behavior (especially for the same criminal behavior) | Synonyms: habitual criminal, repeater |
recipe | (noun) directions for making something | Synonyms: formula |
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recipient | (noun) the semantic role of the animate entity that is passively involved in the happening denoted by the verb in the clause | Synonyms: recipient role |
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(noun) a person who receives something | Synonyms: receiver |
reciprocal | (adjective) concerning each of two or more persons or things; especially given or done in return | Synonyms: mutual |
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(adjective) of or relating to the multiplicative inverse of a quantity or function | - |
(noun) hybridization involving a pair of crosses that reverse the sexes associated with each genotype | Synonyms: reciprocal cross |
(noun) (mathematics) one of a pair of numbers whose product is 1: the reciprocal of 2/3 is 3/2; the multiplicative inverse of 7 is 1/7 | Synonyms: multiplicative inverse |
(noun) something (a term or expression or concept) that has an inverse relation to something else | - |
reciprocality | (noun) a relation of mutual dependence or action or influence | Synonyms: reciprocity |
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reciprocally | (adverb) in an inverse or contrary manner | Synonyms: inversely |
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(adverb) in a mutual or shared manner | Synonyms: mutually |
(adverb) (often followed by `for') in exchange or in reciprocation | Synonyms: in return |
reciprocate | (verb) alternate the direction of motion of | - |
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(verb) act, feel, or give mutually or in return | - |
reciprocation | (noun) the act of making or doing something in return | - |
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(noun) alternating back-and-forth movement | - |
(noun) mutual interaction; the activity of reciprocating or exchanging (especially information) | Synonyms: give-and-take, interchange |
reciprocative | (adjective) moving alternately backward and forward | Synonyms: reciprocatory |
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(adjective) given or done or owed to each other | Synonyms: reciprocatory |
reciprocatory | (adjective) moving alternately backward and forward | Synonyms: reciprocative |
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(adjective) given or done or owed to each other | Synonyms: reciprocative |
reciprocity | (noun) mutual exchange of commercial or other privileges | - |
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(noun) a relation of mutual dependence or action or influence | Synonyms: reciprocality |
recirculation | (noun) circulation again | - |
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recission | (noun) (law) the act of rescinding; the cancellation of a contract and the return of the parties to the positions they would have had if the contract had not been made | Synonyms: rescission |
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recital | (noun) the act of giving an account describing incidents or a course of events | Synonyms: narration, yarn |
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(noun) a public instance of reciting or repeating (from memory) something prepared in advance | Synonyms: reading, recitation |
(noun) performance of music or dance especially by soloists | - |
(noun) a detailed account or description of something | - |
recitalist | (noun) a musician who gives recitals | - |
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recitation | (noun) systematic training by multiple repetitions | Synonyms: drill, exercise, practice, practice session |
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(noun) a regularly scheduled session as part of a course of study | Synonyms: class period, course session |
(noun) a public instance of reciting or repeating (from memory) something prepared in advance | Synonyms: reading, recital |
(noun) written matter that is recited from memory | - |
recitative | (noun) a vocal passage of narrative text that a singer delivers with natural rhythms of speech | - |
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recite | (verb) repeat aloud from memory | - |
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(verb) narrate or give a detailed account of | Synonyms: narrate, recount, tell |
(verb) recite in elocution | Synonyms: declaim |
(verb) specify individually | Synonyms: enumerate, itemise, itemize |
(verb) render verbally | Synonyms: retell |
reciter | (noun) someone who recites from memory | - |
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reckless | (adjective) marked by defiant disregard for danger or consequences | Synonyms: foolhardy, heady, rash |
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(adjective) characterized by careless unconcern | Synonyms: heedless |
recklessly | (adverb) in a reckless manner | - |
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recklessness | (noun) the trait of giving little thought to danger | Synonyms: foolhardiness, rashness |
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reckon | (verb) deem to be | Synonyms: consider, regard, see, view |
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(verb) make a mathematical calculation or computation | Synonyms: calculate, cipher, compute, cypher, figure, work out |
(verb) expect, believe, or suppose | Synonyms: guess, imagine, opine, suppose, think |
(verb) judge to be probable | Synonyms: calculate, count on, estimate, figure, forecast |
(verb) have faith or confidence in | Synonyms: bank, bet, calculate, count, depend, look, rely, swear |
(verb) take account of | Synonyms: count |
reckoner | (noun) a handbook of tables used to facilitate computation | Synonyms: ready reckoner |
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(noun) an expert at calculation (or at operating calculating machines) | Synonyms: calculator, computer, estimator, figurer |
reckoning | (noun) the act of counting; reciting numbers in ascending order | Synonyms: count, counting, enumeration, numeration, tally |
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(noun) problem solving that involves numbers or quantities | Synonyms: calculation, computation, figuring |
(noun) a bill for an amount due | Synonyms: tally |
reclaim | (verb) make useful again; transform from a useless or uncultivated state | - |
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(verb) overcome the wildness of; make docile and tractable | Synonyms: domesticate, domesticise, domesticize, tame |
(verb) bring, lead, or force to abandon a wrong or evil course of life, conduct, and adopt a right one | Synonyms: rectify, reform, regenerate |
(verb) claim back | Synonyms: repossess |
(verb) reuse (materials from waste products) | Synonyms: recover |
reclaimable | (adjective) capable of being used again | Synonyms: recyclable, reusable |
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reclaimed | (adjective) delivered from danger | Synonyms: rescued |
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reclamation | (noun) rescuing from error and returning to a rightful course | Synonyms: reformation |
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(noun) the conversion of wasteland into land suitable for use of habitation or cultivation | Synonyms: rehabilitation, renewal |
(noun) the recovery of useful substances from waste products | - |
reclassification | (noun) classifying something again (usually in a new category) | - |
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reclassify | (verb) classify anew, change the previous classification | - |
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recline | (verb) lean in a comfortable resting position | Synonyms: recumb, repose |
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(verb) cause to recline | - |
(verb) move the upper body backwards and down | Synonyms: lean back |
recliner | (noun) an armchair whose back can be lowered and foot can be raised to allow the sitter to recline in it | Synonyms: lounger, reclining chair |
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reclining | (noun) the act of assuming or maintaining a reclining position | - |
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recluse | (adjective) withdrawn from society; seeking solitude | Synonyms: reclusive, withdrawn |
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(noun) one who lives in solitude | Synonyms: hermit, solitary, solitudinarian, troglodyte |
reclusive | (adjective) providing privacy or seclusion | Synonyms: cloistered, secluded, sequestered |
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(adjective) withdrawn from society; seeking solitude | Synonyms: recluse, withdrawn |
reclusiveness | (noun) a disposition to prefer seclusion or isolation | - |
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recode | (verb) put into a different code; rearrange mentally | - |
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recoding | (noun) converting from one code to another | - |
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recognisable | (adjective) capable of being recognized | Synonyms: placeable, recognizable |
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recognisance | (noun) (law) a security entered into before a court with a condition to perform some act required by law; on failure to perform that act a sum is forfeited | Synonyms: recognizance |
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recognise | (verb) perceive to be the same | Synonyms: recognize |
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(verb) be fully aware or cognizant of | Synonyms: agnise, agnize, realise, realize, recognize |
(verb) accept (someone) to be what is claimed or accept his power and authority | Synonyms: acknowledge, know, recognize |
(verb) express obligation, thanks, or gratitude for | Synonyms: acknowledge, recognize |
(verb) express greetings upon meeting someone | Synonyms: greet, recognize |
(verb) detect with the senses | Synonyms: discern, distinguish, make out, pick out, recognize, spot, tell apart |
(verb) grant credentials to | Synonyms: accredit, recognize |
(verb) show approval or appreciation of | Synonyms: recognize |
recognised | (adjective) generally approved or compelling recognition | Synonyms: accepted, recognized |
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(adjective) provided with a secure reputation | Synonyms: recognized |
recognition | (noun) designation by the chair granting a person the right to speak in a deliberative body | - |
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(noun) the process of recognizing something or someone by remembering | Synonyms: identification |
(noun) an acceptance (as of a claim) as true and valid | - |
(noun) coming to understand something clearly and distinctly | Synonyms: realisation, realization |
(noun) approval | Synonyms: credit |
(noun) the explicit and formal acknowledgement of a government or of the national independence of a country | - |
(noun) (biology) the ability of one molecule to attach to another molecule that has a complementary shape | - |
(noun) the state or quality of being recognized or acknowledged | Synonyms: acknowledgement, acknowledgment |
recognizable | (adjective) capable of being recognized | Synonyms: placeable, recognisable |
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(adjective) easily perceived; easy to become aware of | - |
recognizably | (adverb) to a recognizable degree | - |
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recognizance | (noun) (law) a security entered into before a court with a condition to perform some act required by law; on failure to perform that act a sum is forfeited | Synonyms: recognisance |
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recognize | (verb) perceive to be the same | Synonyms: recognise |
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(verb) be fully aware or cognizant of | Synonyms: agnise, agnize, realise, realize, recognise |
(verb) accept (someone) to be what is claimed or accept his power and authority | Synonyms: acknowledge, know, recognise |
(verb) express obligation, thanks, or gratitude for | Synonyms: acknowledge, recognise |
(verb) express greetings upon meeting someone | Synonyms: greet, recognise |
(verb) detect with the senses | Synonyms: discern, distinguish, make out, pick out, recognise, spot, tell apart |
(verb) grant credentials to | Synonyms: accredit, recognise |
(verb) show approval or appreciation of | Synonyms: recognise |
(verb) exhibit recognition for (an antigen or a substrate) | - |