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Described

Described is the past tense and past participle of the verb describe. To describe is to convey the appearance, nature, or attributes of someone or something through speech or writing. Described indicates that such an account has already been made. It may appear in active constructions (“She described the scene”) or as a participial adjective (“the described phenomenon,” meaning the phenomenon that has been described).

Etymology: The verb derives from Latin describere, “to write down,” formed from de- “down” or “away” plus

Usage: In formal or academic prose, described is commonly used to report how sources or researchers characterize

See also: describe, description, descriptive, descriptor.

scribere
“to
write.”
It
entered
English
via
Old
French
and
the
Middle
English
period,
with
the
modern
spelling
established
by
the
Early
Modern
English
era.
a
subject,
often
with
a
citation
(“the
model
is
described
as
robust”)
or
in
the
passive
voice
(“the
method
was
described
in
detail”).
The
phrase
“as
described”
signals
reliance
on
a
specific
source.
The
word
can
also
function
as
a
participial
adjective,
as
in
“the
described
method”
or
“the
described
features,”
where
it
modifies
a
noun
to
indicate
prior
description.