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The Collaborative International Dictionary
categorized

categorized \categorized\ adj. placed in a category.

Wiktionary
categorized
  1. The characteristic of having been placed or sorted in a category or categories. v

  2. (en-past of: categorize)

WordNet
categorized

adj. arranged into categories [syn: categorised]

Usage examples of "categorized".

Don Juan suggested that spontaneous states of non-ordinary reality occurred under unique conditions, and he categorized them as gifts from or bestowals by the power contained in the plant.

Don Juan categorized the ally contained in Datura inoxia as having two qualities: it was woman-like, and it was a giver of superfluous power.

Satellites in orbit noted the explosion and computers on the ground automatically categorized it as a nuclear explosion.

And now, just because she had been nasty with him on the phone and never acknowledged his last invitation to meet today, he had categorized her as less desirable or less deserving.

The question had been asked, he felt ready, and so he stepped off the edge of a social cliff, saying things he knew could get him categorized as a kook.

On Earth they had never completely categorized the ecosystem, and they had millennia.

None of the extrasensory abilities can be neatly categorized, because capability varies from person to per­son, just like reading ability.

Let's just say that we'll all feel a lot better when you've categorized more of the life around here, but there are unavoidable risks attached.

An entirely reasonable precaution: Chaka had already categorized at least twelve deadly plants and identified three toxic species.

Let’s just say that we’ll all feel a lot better when you’ve categorized more of the life around here, but there are unavoidable risks attached.

Superficially noted long ago, categorized as a quotable quote because it touched so directly on his line of work, a dictum by Xavier Conroy drifted out of his subconscious: "Western culture is una process of transition from guilt-oriented, with a conscience, to shame-oriented, with a morbid fear of being found out.

Without allowing time for a response, he categorized those other anatomical attributes of his colleague which he so violently craved and so seldom enjoyed as he would have wished, until at last he ran out of breath in a welter of crude Anglo-Saxon terminology.

As though catching the fragments of a nuclear expiece by slow piece and forcing them back into the form of neatly machined metal billets Lyla absorbed the facts her senses presented and categorized them into patterns.

He categorized all human beings as possessing awareness, in a general sense, which permits them to see energy directly, and he categorized sorcerers as the only human beings who were deliberately conscious of seeing energy directly.

In Ruth’s estimation, the Dutch—at least while exercising—preferred an unrelenting and unvarying kind of rock music, which she would have categorized as an unrhymed form of rap.