idealization|idealizations in English

noun idealization (Amer.)

[i·de·al·i·za·tion || aɪ‚dɪələ'zeɪʃn /-laɪ'z-]

process of making something ideal; viewing of someone or something as ideal, romanticizing (also idealisation)

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "idealization|idealizations" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "idealization|idealizations", or refer to the context using the word "idealization|idealizations" in the English Dictionary.

1. Such assumptions are idealizations.

2. In addition, admiration and idealization of the leader of the group takes place through the process of idealization.

3. Coot also allows model manipulations such as idealization, real space refinement

4. This Andromache is famous as an idealization of a Greek wife

5. There is an idealization of the nōkanshi as presented in the film.

6. Apotheosis noun deification, elevation, exaltation, glorification, idealization, idolization This was the time of the star's Apotheosis

7. Bivocal narratives oscillate between self-idealization and self-condemnation, which she describes as form of ‘Georgianness’.

8. O'Neill argues that a successful Kantian account of social justice must not rely on any unwarranted idealizations or assumption.

9. There is a process of "idealization, glorification and dramatization," and it's not just the case for people.

10. Two time step idealizations of the equations are described and alternative forms of the latent heat matrix are derived.

11. 3 It gave a boost to the exaltation of the countryside, the idealization of a lost, golden, pre-industrial Arcadia.

12. This is why narcissistic Abusers dominate our brains in the early idealization phases of the relationship with their lovebombing, the excessive adoration we receive in the beginning

13. The finite element idealizations of the symmetric half of the pipe joint are shown in Figure 1.1.1–2 and Figure 1.1.1–3, corresponding to the Axisymmetric and three-dimensional analyses, respectively

14. Suzanne Delehanty has described the "Technological Reliquaries" as "a protest against pop arts ready acceptance of mass production and minimalism's idealization of technology." One would agree that they subvert those dominant modes of the '60s, whether humorously or in outright Antipathy