Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun One who recognizes.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun One who recognizes; a recognizor.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A person or device that
recognizes .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word recognizer.
Examples
-
Art included the recognizer, which is a bit evolved from the original film.
Comic-Con: Tron 2 Retitled TRON Legacy; IMAX 3D; Concept Art and New Scene Revealed | /Film 2009
-
For data input, you do get the option of a touch QWERTY keyboard, a 20 key, a touch keypad, and a transcriber and a block recognizer which is the old Graffiti program where you write letters and numbers and it recognizes it - most of the time anyway.
-
These programs usually allow the "recognizer" to document the behavior and communicate to the recipient the special thing they did to deserve recognition.
-
Limitation of senses does not hinder the sensitivity of this phone coz it combines technologies of blind-touch screen (Braille), voice systems and programs to function as regular phone, navi-system, book reader and object recognizer.
B-Touch Innovative Mobile Touchphone For The Blind by Zhenwei You » Yanko Design 2009
-
The Page's Katie Rooney (some of you might recognizer her from The Page's RSS feed) does the technical magic that makes the link appear in my in box.
Audio from March 5 Obama Conference Call - Swampland - TIME.com 2008
-
It's have CAPTCHA recognizer, email verificator, and a lot of other functions ...
-
A simple biophysical model they developed indicates that in picking out the target molecule from a crowd of look-alikes, the recognizer has an advantage if it is slightly off-target.
-
Well-read, and an intelligent recognizer of patterns, but a deeply confused and undisciplined thinker.
-
"There's not a speech recognizer today that you can't break by stretching out certain syllables," says Deb Roy, director of the Cognitive Machines Group at the MIT Media Lab.
Burning Question: Why Can't We Control Gadgets by Voice Alone? 2009
-
"There's not a speech recognizer today that you can't break by stretching out certain syllables," says Deb Roy, director of the Cognitive Machines Group at the MIT Media Lab.
Burning Question: Why Can't We Control Gadgets by Voice Alone? By Bryan Gardiner 2009
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.