From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary EnglishRelated topics: Literaturecharacterizationchar‧ac‧ter‧i‧za‧tion (also characterisation British English) /ˌkærəktəraɪˈzeɪʃən $ -tərə-/ noun [countable, uncountable]1ALthe way in which a writer makes a person in a book, film, or play seem like a real person
Pilcher’s books have humour, good characterization, and lively dialogue.2DESCRIBEthe way in which the character of a real person or thing is describedcharacterization of somebody/something as something
the characterization of the enemy as ‘fanatics’Examples from the Corpuscharacterization• The new assumption we need is a characterization of the decision to enter.• In chapters 6 and 7 I would like to propose a characterization of grammar and language use which shows their interdependence.• However, there is a reasonablebalance of characterization between them.• An engagingblend of poeticcharacterization and deductive reasoning, it was delivered for the most part in a wearymonotone.• The difficulty is that, however strong in outline, the characterization turns out to be weak in detail.• The characterization is believable, but it's still not a very good book.characterization of somebody/something as something• So, too, may seem my characterization of physics as the study of simplicity.• McComb objects to the letter's characterization of his supporters as "malcontents."• Valley residents will simply love the characterization of the area as a haven for working-class yahoos.• The characterization of deliberative thinking asinternalargument is a universal characterization.