Vocabulary List Number 390 v.0.3 with 7 entries made up of 4 chapters with 3 definitions, 1 synonyms and 4 examples.
1. Main Definitions
- identity |n| a person's name and other facts about who they are. (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 2, 2025)
- "The man's identity was being kept secret while he was helping police with their enquiries." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 2, 2025)
- "I cannot reveal the identity of my source." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 2, 2025)
- "The informant was given a new identity (= a different name and new official documents) for protection." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 2, 2025)
2. Personal Documents
- birth certificate |n| an official document issued to record a person's birth and identify them by
name, place, date of birth, and parentage. (From Oxford Languages. Nov 27, 2025) - "Her father, Arthur, is listed on the birth certificate as a civil engineer." (From Oxford Languages. Dec 2, 2025)
- "The time of my entrance is recorded, a birth certificate or an identity card is withheld, and a slip is issued to be signed by the hosting - administrator." (From the Cambridge English Corpus. Dec 2, 2025)
- "Make sure all names match those on birth certificates or passports." (From Collins Dictionary. Nov 27, 2025)
- "The envelope with my birth certificate had that name on the front, Rudi." (Sara MacDonald, Sea Music. Dec 2, 2025)
- identity card 1 / ID card 1 |n| an official document or card with your name, date of birth, photograph, or other information on it that proves who you are. (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 2, 2025)
- identity card 2 / ID card 2 |n| a card carrying the holder's photograph, name, date of birth, and other personal details, serving as official proof of their identity. (From Oxford Languages Dictionary. Dec 3, 2025
- "I believe that an identity card for pensioners and the use of computers should replace these cumbersome forms of authorising payments." (From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English
- 'All you need is your identity card and your health insurance card." (From Oxford Languages Dictionary. Dec 3, 2025)
- "You'll need to show your ID card to get in." (From Word Reference Dictionary. Dec 3, 2025)
- "All foreign nationals are required to carry Identity cards." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 2, 2025)
- passport 1 |n| an official document issued by a government, certifying the holder's identity and citizenship and entitling them to travel under its protection to and from foreign countries. (from Merriam Webster. Dec 2, 2025)
- passport 2 |n| an official document containing personal information and usually a photograph that allows a person to travel to foreign countries and to prove who they are. (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "He was charged with possessing a fake passport." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "My passport runs out next month - I must get it renewed." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "My passport is valid for another two years." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "A British citizen with a valid passport does not need a visa to visit the US." (From Merriam Webster. Dec 2, 2025)
- "He's got a British passport." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- pet passport |n| a document that officially records information related to a specific animal, as part of a scheme that allows animals to travel between member countries without undergoing quarantine. From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "Pet passports have been like a dream come true." (From The Guardian. Dec 4, 2025)
- "Is it tempting fate to renew a pet passport?" (From The Guardian. Dec 4, 2025)
- "What will happen about my pet's passport? (From The Guardian. Dec 4, 2025)
- "The current pet passport scheme will end, and you will need to get an animal health certificate when you want to travel overseas." (From The Guardian. Dec 4, 2025)
- "She had a bacterial infection and her pet passport did not match her microchip."(From The Guardian. Dec 4, 2025)
- "A pet passport pays for itself after the first holiday." (From Times, Sunday Times . Dec 4, 2025)
- "They must have a microchip, a pet passport and up-to-date vaccinations." (From Times, Sunday Times. Dec 4, 2025)
- "To get a pet passport pets must be microchipped and given a rabies vaccination." (From Times, Sunday Times . Dec 4, 2025)
- "She needed a series of vaccinations to qualify for a pet passport." (From Times, Sunday Times. Dec 4, 2025)
- "Finally, when you're travelling abroad, the chip will identify an animal for a pet passport." (From Times, Sunday Times . Dec 4, 2025)
- "He was the first dog to take up a pet passport, enabling him to travel to the UK without spending six months in quarantine on arrival." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
3. Elements Related to Identity
- biometric identification |n| is the process of verifying a person's identity by single unique
physical or bahavioral traits, such as fingerprint, facial features, or voice patterns, to confirm they are who they claim to be. (From Oxford Languages Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025) - "Yet the bank still lacks many features of its digital rivals, including logging in using biometric identification such as fingerprint or facial recognition. (From: Times, Sunday Times. Dec 4, 2025)
- "Many banking apps also support biometric identification." (From Collins Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "Photo-identity checks and biometric identification methods could be used to combat this, she suggested." (From Collins Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "Biometric identification systems are however not fool proof." (Retrieved from Wikipedia CC BY-SA 3.0)
- "Biometric identification requires that a verifier searches for matches in a data base that contains data about the entire population." (Retrieved from Wikipedia CC BY-SA 3.0)
- face recognition |n| identification of people by means of computer technology capable of recognizing their facial features, used especially for security purposes or to give users access to devices or systems. (From Oxford Languages Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "Biometric identification systems may include facial recognition." (From Oxford Languages Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "Tampa became the first US city to use facial recognition for law enforcement in a public area." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "There is concern about governments using facial recognition to racially profile and covertly track citizens." (from Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "Banks, casinos, and other businesses now routinely use face recognition to identify fraudsters." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- "Data could be called up instantly using face recognition technology, reminding you of the person's name and key facts about them. (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 4, 2025)
- fingerprint 1 |n| an impression or mark made on a surface by a person's fingertip, able to be used for identifying individuals from the unique pattern of whorls and lines on the fingertips. (From Oxford Languages Dictionary. Dec 3, 2025)
- fingerprint 2 |n| the pattern of curved lines on the end of a finger or thumb that is different in every person, or a mark left by this pattern. (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 3, 2025)
- "His fingerprints were all over the gun." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 3, 2025)
- "Jurists frequently relied on confessions to validate the scientific basis of latent fingerprint identification." (From the Cambridge English Corpus. Dec 3, 2025)
- "Proponents of this approach might claim that in many ways this is similar to the advent of fingerprint files." (From the Cambridge English Corpus. Dec 3, 2025)
- "The band definition was adequate for confident visual comparison of the fingerprints located on the same or on different agarose gels." (From the Cambridge English Corpus. Dec 3, 2025)
- "The police have taken fingerprints from every man in the neighbourhood." (From Oxford Languages Dictionary. Dec 3, 2025)
- "I was booked, fingerprinted, and locked up for the night." (From Oxford La guaches Dictionary. Dec 3, 2025)
- "We would like to fingerprint every one of your employees." (From Cambridge Dictionary. Dec 3, 2025)
- name |n| a word or set of words by which a person or thing is known, addressed, or referred to.
- "My name is John Parsons."(From Collins Dictionary. Nov 27, 2025)
- "Make sure all names match those on birth certificates or passports" (From Collins Dictionary. Nov 27, 2025)
- "My professor's name is Smith." (From Word Reference. Dec 3, 2025)
- "They are going to name the baby Michael." (From Word Reference. Dec 3, 2025)
- "Let's name the song "Furtive Mission." (From Word Reference. Dec 3, 2025)
4. More about Identity
- mistaken identity |n| a situation due to being mistaken for someone else. (From Merriam Webster. Dec 2,
2025) - "Her arrest was a case of mistaken identity." (From Merriam Webster. Dec 2, 2025)
- "Gadsden County Sheriff Morris Young said investigators believe the shooting was a case of mistaken identity, the Associated Press reported." (Charlotte Phillipp, People. Dec 2, 2025.
- "Taylor Swift spilled the tea on how a case of mistaken identity during her Eras Tour led to her fiancĂ©, Travis Kelce, meeting Greta Gerwig… eventually." (Charisma Mandaran, Rolling Stone. Nov. 2, 2025)
- "The newspaper photo apparently showed." him in Rome, but it was a case of mistaken identity (= it was the wrong person)." (From Merriam Webster. Dec 2, 2025)
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