Examples of using Characterised in English and their translations into Korean
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Programming
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Computer
The government later characterised the protest as a"riot".
What characterised him best as a person was his intense loyalty to his friends and to his profession.
The period of reforms, which largely characterised the previous 60 years, is now at an end.
They are characterised by low rates of education and employment, and high rates of disability, criminal convictions and poverty.
Higher Stances- In Chen Style almost all movements are characterised by lower stances.
People also translate
The bird's eye design is characterised by a particular geometric motif and has a weight of 280 g.
One dimension concerns whether the actions of agents should be characterised as rational or irrational.
Enthusiasm and strong will characterised Janiszewski not only in his scientific work, but in his life generally.
To study and work at Linnaeus University means being part of an environment characterised by knowledge and development.
Cogan's syndrome is a rare disease characterised by the involvement of eyes and inner ear with photophobia, dizziness and hearing loss.
Another point of comparison exists between the developmentof proletarian consciousness and the ideological processes that characterised the struggle of revolutionary classes in the past.
However, they are generally characterised by some combination of abnormal thoughts, emotions, behaviour and relationships with others.
Established in 2005, we produce a wide selection of bags, wallets and purses- both women's and men's – all characterised by leading edge designs with proven sales appeal.
If you have frequent angina attacks(characterised by chest pains), you're twice as likely to suffer an attack in the air as on the ground.
He went there to study mathematics but,although he found the courses easy, he became increasingly worried by the abstraction and lack of applications which characterised the course at this time.
The international automotive sector is characterised by intensive networking between individual companies.
Characterised by glass, rough stone and sharp angles, Andel's is adjacent to the Novy Smichov shopping arcade, a couple of multiplexes and several restaurants.
Since 2010, the UK has pursued a policy of austerity characterised by public spending cuts and welfare changes.
They are characterised by flowing movement like water in a stream, much Qigong(Chi Gong) practise such as Form 11, and whenever one foot stepping forward or backward the other foot follows.
Our research is potentially important for life-threatening blood cancers characterised by dysfunctional stem cells- which are common in elderly people.
He was deeply concerned with most forms of human culture and creativity, andon all he could converse with the fascinating combination of logic, insight and knowledge that characterised his mathematics.
Alzheimer's disease is the most common form of dementia, characterised by progressive loss of cognition- our ability to learn, remember and plan our lives.
The lightweight, portable radar system defines the range, azimuth, elevation and velocity measurements for up to 200 targets simultaneously, including miniature UAVs characterised by a small signature with a low speed and altitude.
Stainless steel 316/316L round bars are characterised by improved corrosion resistance in most acidic conditions, especially at higher temperatures and/or with chlorides present.
Iron deficiency is therefore one of several casualties of poor dietary patterns in Australia and other westernised countries, characterised by excessive intake of highly processed foods and inadequate intake of nutritious whole foods.
Zygmunt Bauman characterised the riots as acts of‘defective and disqualified consumers': more than anything else, they were a manifestation of a consumerist desire violently enacted when unable to realise itself in the‘proper' way- by shopping.
In more broad terms, you can state that the spring system is a very much characterised instrument that backings a few web applications using Java as a programming language.
Chang's portrayal of life in 1940s Shanghai and Japanese-occupied Hong Kong is remarkable in its focus on everyday life and the absence of the political subtext which characterised many other writers of the period.
Gill& Scharff describe it as"a mode of political and economic rationality characterised by privatisation, deregulation and a rolling back and withdrawal of the state from many areas of social provision".
General Brussilov at a conference at headquarters in the beginning of May succinctly characterised the condition of the commanding staff: 15 to 20 per cent had adapted themselves to the new order through conviction; a part of the officers were beginning to flirt with the soldiers and incite them against the commanding staff; but the majority, about 75 per cent, could not adapt themselves, were offended, were hiding in their shells, and did not know what to do.