尋找適合你的 英語 教師……
Karim
confusing words legitimate and legitimise ??? legitimacy or legitimization ??
2012年8月16日 00:40
解答 · 6
1
Legitimate is an adjective meaning legal, following standard or rules, or well-founded (as in a legitimate argument.) Legitimacy is a noun describing the state of being legitimate. "He questioned the document's legitimacy." = He thought the document might be fake. Legitimization is a noun that means the process by which something is made legitimization. "He worked hard on the legitimization of the document." = He tried to prove the document was not fake. Legitimize is a verb meaning to make something legitimate. "The judge officially legitimized the document." = The judge declared the document to be valid and legal. Note: British use 'legitimise', Americans spell it 'legitimize'. Just remember which country you're in when you spell it.
2012年8月16日
"Legitimate" is an adjective. "Legitimacy" is the noun form of that adjective. It is a characteristic (just as "kindness" is a characteristic & the noun form of "kind.") "To legitimize" is a verb. It means "to make (something) legitimate" "Legitimization" is the NOUN form of that verb, or the act of making something legitimate. Some example sentences: Is the rumor LEGITIMATE ? I'm not sure about the rumor's LEGITIMACY. Has any qualified person LEGITIMIZED the rumor? The LEGITIMIZATION of this rumor would really change things. I hope this helps! Let me know if you have any questions.
2012年8月16日
These are members of the same word family. Before a person knows a word, all the members of the word family must be known. legitimate (adjective) - authentic or lawful legitimise or legitimatise (verb) - to make legitimate legitimacy (noun) - the quality of being legitimate legitimization (noun) - the act of legitimatising
2012年8月16日
還沒找到你要的答案嗎?
寫下你的問題,讓母語者來幫助你!

Don’t miss out on the opportunity to learn a language from the comfort of your own home. Browse our selection of experienced language tutors and enroll in your first lesson now!