🇬🇧🇪🇸 designate - designar : English Lesson
verb
Meaning of "designate" ("designar"), detailed definition, and a short video lesson below.
To designate something means to officially choose it for a special job or purpose and say, “This is what it’s for.” For example, a school might designate one room as the art room, or your family might designate Saturday as game night. When you designate, you pick something and clearly say how it will be used.
My family designated the car as the “No Arguing Zone,” so we now hold all official sibling battles in the driveway before leaving.
My grandma designated one drawer in the kitchen as the “Secret Candy Drawer”; unfortunately, she told literally everyone.
Dad designated Saturday morning as Chore Time, but I cleverly designated myself as “Temporarily Invisible.”
We designated the weird leftover vegetables as “Mystery Soup,” and even the spoon looked nervous.
The teacher designated a “No Whining Zone” in the classroom, so now everyone just dramatically sighs instead.
At the school fair the tired teacher asked the children to designate helpers. They designate a brave girl for the banner, designate a shy boy to hold the map, designate a small ribbon for the winner, and designate a quiet bench for rest. The helpers beam; the teacher wipes a tear and claps.
🧑🎓 CEFR Level: C2 Proficient
This word is at the C2 level, which means it represents the highest mastery of English. It’s often used in specialized or highly formal contexts and helps you communicate with precision and subtlety, much like a native speaker.
Expanding your English vocabulary is one of the best ways to improve your pronunciation, spelling, and confidence in English. Watch the video above to memorize the word, understand its meaning, and see example sentences in action. Discover related words to grow your vocabulary naturally. Add words to your playlist for stress-free, effective learning—anytime, anywhere! Watch, learn, repeat.