英:['vʌlgəraɪz]
美:['vʌlgəraɪz]
英:['vʌlgəraɪz]
美:['vʌlgəraɪz]
Verb
1. cater to popular taste to make popular and present to the general public; bring into general or common use;
"They popularized coffee in Washington State"
"Relativity Theory was vulgarized by these authors"
2. debase and make vulgar;
"The Press has vulgarized Love and Marriage"
3. act in a vulgar manner;
"The drunkard tends to vulgarize"
1 Incense is full of divine and beautiful suggestion; but the moment you begin to vulgarise it by talking, or even thinking, of its smell, all beauty and significance is destroyed.
2 For this gift of expression was such as had never been seen before, and such as, for all the copying and vulgarising of it, has never been seen since.
3 Such a proceeding, by depriving it of its venerable and appropriate surroundings, would vulgarise an entertainment which should have remained, within the precincts of Gray's Inn, archaic and unique.
4 It is you, freak-fashionables, who are undoing the work of Washington and Lincoln, vulgarising your high heritage, and turning the last and noblest hope of humanity into a caricature.
5 But was it fair—was it just to engender a love of luxury—to introduce her to all that her nature—vulgarised by unfamiliarity—coveted most!
6 "I could not stand by," he continues, "and see the sublime figure of Christ vulgarised to make an Adelphi holiday."
7 In the freedom with which he uses, without vulgarising, popular modes of speech, he has no equal among Latin writers.’—Sellar.
8 Thus we may console ourselves with the hope that life has vulgarised her, and that as a girl she was far less objectionable than she now represents herself to have been.
9 The manœuvring of the elder, which might easily have been vulgarised on the one hand or devitalised on the other, just remains refreshingly and believably human.
10 From our Lord's own commentary upon their rejection we learn to beware of the vulgarising effects of familiarity.
11 A better example of the vulgarising effects of wealth, and of the refining effects of being without it, was never packed in a neater compass.
12 If it was through such notions that they abstained from vulgarising its use, then they were on the way to paganism, through a materialised worship.
13 Marjory was too thorough a child to be vulgarised in that way, even in thought.
14 But beauty may be dishonoured, it cannot be vulgarised.
15 As we stood on the now deserted pavement, exhorting and cheering him, a loud contralto voice vulgarised by an Italian accent burst upon us.
16 Both methods are right if well done, and both methods can equally be vulgarised if badly done.
17 I am not afraid of the accusation of vulgarising the classics.
18 The best present-day example is the deal table in those last places to be vulgarised, farm-house or cottage kitchen.
19 Absolutely valueless—utterly without the power of giving pleasure, they only satiate the eye, and vulgarise their own forms.
20 We have now seen the worst of that society, whether crushed by the tyranny of the Caesars, or corrupted and vulgarised by sudden elevation from ignominious poverty to wealth and luxury.
1 普及
diffused spread prevalence diffusion propagation propagate diffuse popularize generalize vulgarize
2 使通俗化
3 使庸俗化
4 庸俗化
5 使普及