0 past simple and past participle of designate
1 to choose someone officially to do a particular job:
Traditionally, the president designates his or her successor.
[ + to infinitive ] She has been designated to organize the meeting.
This area of the park has been specially designated for children.
They officially designated the area (as) unsuitable for human habitation.
The grey area surrounded by a symbol shows the allowable range for the control points to stay within the designated vehicle class.
A genitive nominal, on the other hand, signals that the designated thing is not there as a participant of the event in question.
However, we need to administer the elicitation context more tightly to "force" the subjects to produce certain target predicates with a designated argument structure.
Whenever a disagreement arose, a third observer designated by consensus by the working group issued the final verdict.
Designated in the language of business "modernism" as backward, localist, and inefficient, batch firms in time came to resemble that definition.
Traditionally, surveillance of bacterial diseases is performed by analysis of isolated bacteria in each designated centre of each country.
However, in both cases the object of the verbal activity is something extracted from the designated thing of the genitive nominals.
An intersection at the designated edge produces the same violations as a monosyllabic foot.