Synonym: actualise, actualize, agnise, agnize, bring in, clear, earn, gain, make, pull in, realize, recognise, recognize, see, substantiate, take in, understand. Similar words: realism, realistic, vandalise, realize, specialise, conceptualise, real, deal in. Meaning: v. 1. earn on some commercial or business transaction; earn as salary or wages 2. convert into cash; of goods and property 3. expand or complete (a part in a piece of baroque music) by supplying the harmonies indicated in the figured bass 4. make real or concrete; give reality or substance to 5. be fully aware or cognizant of 6. perceive (an idea or situation) mentally.
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211. Artist Rob Piercy, of Porthmadog, considers himself lucky to be able to realise his childhood dreams.
212. She loved him so much, and to realise that she was only an episode in his busy life was bitter indeed.
213. Only when he stooped and some lire changed hands did she realise that he must be intending to walk back.
214. Even they realise, however,(www.Sentencedict.com) that the real world makes that an increasingly forlorn hope.
215. I remember leaving a ledge to abseil down Scafell's East Buttress once only to realise I was falling out of control.
216. If I think the reason for moral thought and action is to realise intrinsically worthwhile states, I have been duped.
217. Does he realise that home workers in my constituency receive as little as 40p an hour?
218. De Gaulle meant, as you would realise, that he wanted to take her out of earshot and have a whisper.
219. I finished the song and only as I left the stage did I realise I had wet myself with fear.
220. If you do this during a landing, there will not be time to realise your error.
221. Sir Herbert Morgan took it upon himself to act as chairman of an unofficial committee to help realise the three-year project.
222. This caused some confusion in the grandstands as most spectators did not realise that they had gone through Kyle and O'Grady.
223. He felt blood on his face but still did not realise the full extent of the wound.
224. Learn to tie it and you will realise there is nothing better.
225. By this stage we were beginning to realise the formula is two days in Paris, six days in a health farm.
226. Most people caring for diabetic patients realise the importance of the patient actively participating in the very first injection of insulin.
227. But, before you can find a solution, you first have to realise that a problem exists.
228. Stephen admits he's unlikely to realise his lifelong ambition of playing for Aston Villa.
229. All of this helps us to realise that a great miracle lies in the very handing on of faith.
230. Mature people realise that when their attitude becomes negative, this is a signal for trouble ahead, including self-victimisation.
231. Even so, it took me till I got to my own house to realise the very simple truth.
232. It has more room for manoeuvre than it appears to realise, more options than it is willing to acknowledge.
233. The man who is so insensitive that he doesn't realise what's happening needs it spelt out to him.
234. Does not the Minister realise that the unemployment figures in the Province are deplorable?
235. Out from behind a petrol pump appeared a figure that was female, though it took a few seconds to realise it.
236. You soon realise that you're expected to play straight man, but it's hard to complain.
237. There is obviously an ambitious streak in me but I do realise that I am still very young and inexperienced.
238. Forward-looking companies realise a good atmosphere at work and good relations with colleagues are crucial to hanging on to staff.
239. Do you realise, that I've been soldiering longer than anything else since I was a schoolboy?
240. The role of the computer analysts may be more of facilitator than designer, helping to realise the users' wishes.
More similar words: realism, realistic, vandalise, realize, specialise, conceptualise, real, deal in, utilise, really, realm, ethereal, cereal, unreal, symbolise, appealing, revealing, fatalism, vandalism, corporeal, socialism, journalist, mutualism, pluralism, journalism, treatise, incorporeal, a great deal, minimalist, capitalism.