characterise

characterise — verb

1. If a quality or feature is a very typical part of a person, place, or thing, tha

1.動詞及物B2
釋義

If a quality or feature is a very typical part of a person, place, or thing, that quality characterises them — so much so that you use that quality to recognise or describe the person, place, or thing. For example, a dry climate characterises northern Mexico, or a calm manner characterises an experienced teacher.

例句

The dry, dusty climate that characterises northern Mexico makes the landscape very different from the tropical south.

something + characterises + place

A quiet, patient approach characterised Élise's work as a nurse in the busy hospital.

noun phrase + characterises + possessive noun

同義詞
  • typify

    more informal and slightly less common; suggests an example that perfectly represents a group ('His behaviour typifies the attitude of his generation.')

  • distinguish

    emphasises what makes someone or something different from others ('The tall tower distinguishes the village from miles away.')

  • mark

    suggests a clear, visible feature that sets something apart ('A love of tradition marks this community.')

文法句型

something + characterise(s) + something

something + be characterised + by + something

用法筆記

Most commonly used in the active pattern [quality + characterise + entity] or the passive [entity + be characterised + by + quality]. The passive is especially frequent in academic and descriptive writing, where the focus is on the entity being described rather than on the quality itself.

常見錯誤

The desert is characterised with dry conditions.
The desert is characterised by dry conditions.
💡The correct preposition is 'by', not 'with', to introduce the typical quality.
This region characterises by its hot summers.
This region is characterised by its hot summers.
💡When describing a region's features, use the passive 'is characterised by', not the active form without an object.

2. To describe someone or something by stating their most important qualities or fe

2.動詞及物B2
釋義

To describe someone or something by stating their most important qualities or features — especially when you judge them or fit them into a particular category. For example, a historian might characterise a period as a time of progress, or a critic might characterise a film as a masterpiece of modern cinema.

例句

In her report, Mayumi characterised the new housing policy as creative but impossible to fund.

characterise + noun + as + adjective

The historian Baraka characterised the 1920s as a decade of both great freedom and deep inequality.

characterise + period + as + noun phrase

同義詞
  • describe

    more general; describes any kind of detail, not only the most important qualities ('He described his trip to Japan in detail.')

  • portray

    common in literary and artistic contexts; suggests a visual or creative representation ('The film portrays her as a brave pioneer.')

  • define

    suggests setting clear boundaries or limits around a concept ('The dictionary defines 'courage' as the ability to face danger.')

  • depict

    often used for visual art or written description that creates a vivid picture ('The novel depicts life in Victorian London.')

文法句型

characterise + noun + as + noun/adjective

it is + adj + to characterise + noun

用法筆記

The most common structure is [verb + object + as + complement]. The complement can be an adjective phrase ('as unfair'), a noun phrase ('as a masterpiece'), or a participial phrase ('as being outdated'). This sense is distinct from sense 1: in sense 2, a person actively describes something; in sense 1, a quality naturally belongs to something.