the state or fact of remaining the same one or ones, as under varying aspects or conditions: The identity of the fingerprints on the gun with those on file provided evidence that he was the killer.
the condition of being oneself or itself, and not another: He began to doubt his own identity.
condition or character as to who a person or what a thing is; the qualities, beliefs, etc., that distinguish or identify a person or thing: a case of mistaken identity; a male gender identity; immigrants with strong ethnic identities.
the state or fact of being the same one as described.
the sense of self, providing sameness and continuity in personality over time and sometimes disturbed in mental illnesses, as schizophrenia.
exact likeness in nature or qualities: an identity of interests.
an instance or point of sameness or likeness: to mistake resemblances for identities.
Logic. an assertion that two terms refer to the same thing.
Mathematics.
an equation that is valid for all values of its variables.
Also called identity element,unit element,unity .an element in a set such that the element operating on any other element of the set leaves the second element unchanged.
the property of a function or map such that each element is mapped into itself.
the function or map itself.
AustralianInformal. an interesting, famous, or eccentric resident, usually of long standing in a community.
Origin of identity
First recorded in 1560–70; from Late Latin identitās, equivalent to Latin ident(idem) “repeatedly, again and again,” earlier unattested idem et idem (idem neuter of īdem “the same” + et “and”) + -itās noun suffix; see -ity
Identity comes into English via Middle French identité, ydemtité, ydemptité “the quality of being the same, sameness,” from Late Latin identitās (inflectional stem identitāt- ) “the quality of being the same, the condition or fact that an entity is itself and not another thing.” Identitās is formed partly from the Latin adverb identidem “again and again, repeatedly,” a contraction of idem et idem (“the same and the same”), and partly from Late Latin essentitās, a translation of Greek taủtótēs “identity” (that is, tò auto “the same” and the noun suffix -tēs “-ness”). “One’s personal characteristics, or the sense of who one is, as perceived by the person or by others,” is a meaning of identity that dates from the early 18th century. Since then, issues of personal identity, especially sexual and gender identity, have provoked discussions about one’s overlapping roles in society. The phrase identity politics “political activity based on or catering to the cultural, ethnic, gender, racial, religious, or social interests that characterize a group identity” was coined in 1973.
They were spurred by their research, which revealed Ghanaian banks to be beset by widespread identity fraud and cybercrime and spent nearly $400 million a year to identify their customers.
The race to build facial recognition tech for Africa is being led by this award-winning engineer|Audrey Donkor|September 17, 2020|Quartz
Now we have different sorts of status hierarchies for each identity—related to, for example, class or occupation—and a fire hose of social information layered on top of our personal relationships.
The Dark Side of Smart - Facts So Romantic|Diana Fleischman|September 15, 2020|Nautilus
Acquiring these user identities is one step, the next is to connect a given user identity cohesively across all points in the brand’s digital ecosystem.
Deep Dive: How the Summer of 2020 forced brand marketing to change for the better|jim cooper|September 14, 2020|Digiday
The information requested by these systems to verify a voter’s identity is often easily discoverable,and sometimes even a matter of public record in states that make voter files public.
Voting by mail is more secure than the President says. How to make it even safer|matthewheimer|September 13, 2020|Fortune
The James Beard Foundation is experiencing something of an identity crisis.
The Mess That Is the 2020 James Beard Awards, Explained|Elazar Sontag|September 11, 2020|Eater
They are not the actual traffickers, Yazbek says, so generally the other refugees protect their identity.
Ghost Ships of the Mediterranean|Barbie Latza Nadeau|January 6, 2015|DAILY BEAST
But those strands of his identity are all wound around the conspiracy that led him back to Gambia for the first time in 23 years.
The Shadowy U.S. Veteran Who Tried to Overthrow a Country|Jacob Siegel|January 6, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Identity issues seem to have dogged Otis since his troubles began.
His First Day Out Of Jail After 40 Years: Adjusting To Life Outside|Justin Rohrlich|January 3, 2015|DAILY BEAST
In a remote location with little means for economic development, the Brogpas have cultivating this identity to their advantage.
The Himalayas’ Hidden Aryans|Nina Strochlic|January 3, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Every facet of his identity, taken alone, seemed at war with every other part of him.
The Sydney Astrologer Turned Islamic Radical|Jacob Siegel|December 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Jabez Smith acknowledged his identity and received news of his brother-in-law and his daughter with no signs of pleasure.
Ethel Morton's Enterprise|Mabell S.C. Smith
It will be a gigantic step forward if I learn the identity of his mysterious customer.
The Secret Pact|Mildred A. Wirt
But what seemed to anger them more than all, was the identity of the lad.
The Boy Scouts at the Battle of Saratoga|Herbert Carter
There was money in plenty upon his person, but not an article that would give the slightest clue to his identity.
A Breath of Prairie and other stories|Will Lillibridge
Pawson smiled faintly, then his eyebrows lost their identity in some well-defined wrinkles in his forehead.
Kennedy Square|F. Hopkinson Smith
British Dictionary definitions for identity
identity
/ (aɪˈdɛntɪtɪ) /
nounplural-ties
the state of having unique identifying characteristics held by no other person or thing
the individual characteristics by which a person or thing is recognized
Also called: numerical identitythe property of being one and the same individualhis loss of memory did not affect his identity
Also called: qualitative identitythe state of being the same in nature, quality, etcthey were linked by the identity of their tastes
the state of being the same as a person or thing described or claimedthe identity of the stolen goods has not yet been established
identification of oneself asmoving to London destroyed his Welsh identity
logic
that relation that holds only between any entity and itself
an assertion that that relation holds, as Cicero is Tully
maths
an equation that is valid for all values of its variables, as in (x – y)(x + y) = x ² – y ². Often denoted by the symbol ≡
Also called: identity elementa member of a set that when operating on another member, x, produces that member x: the identity for multiplication of numbers is 1 since x .1 = 1. x = xSee also inverse (def. 2b)
Australian and NZinformala well-known person, esp in a specified locality; figure (esp in the phrase an old identity)
Word Origin for identity
C16: from Late Latin identitās, from Latin idem the same
Why “Identity” Was Dictionary.com’s 2015 Word Of The YearEncapsulating the most robust fields of language evolution and user interest this year, Dictionary.com’s 2015 Word of the Year is identity.