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Recognizing a person's emotional state was an important part of Aaron's assessment routine.
Recognizing a person's handwriting and translating it into typeface is no small feat for a computer.
Recognizing a person of consequence, the magistrate snapped his fingers at the prisoners to rise and swept forward.
Recognizing a person's right to investigate life for oneself, learn from the consequences and in turn form one's own sense of values defines in action the "pursuit of happiness."
A grade is separated from a place in the line hierarchy of a company, it underlines the very possibility of recognizing a person (top) level without being necessarily in a management functions.
"Charity has something to do with handing something down to someone else, versus justice, which is handing something over to which people have a right, which is first recognizing a person as a human being."
The process of officially recognizing a person as a Saint, practiced by some churches, is called canonization, though many Protestant groups use the less formal, broader usage seen in Scripture to include all who are faithful as saints.
A powerful warlord conquering clans in Japan and on the verge of unifying the entire nation, Nobunaga is temperamental and despises all ninja, but is also known for recognizing a person for their abilities rather than their social status.
It is saying too little in that to ask for the reason for the validity of a consent to certain normative consequences is the same as to ask for the reason for recognizing a person as holding a certain right to bring about these consequences.
Another form of behavioral biometrics, based on affective computing, involves computers recognizing a person's emotional state based on an analysis of their facial expressions, how fast they are talking, the tone and pitch of their voice, their posture, and other behavioral traits.
"The New York standard for proof for the termination of treatment is an exacting one, more stringent than almost anyplace else in the country," according to a friend-of-the-court brief prepared by the Society for the Right to Die, a group that advocates recognizing a person's right to reject life-sustaining treatment.