infantilise|infantilised|infantilises|infantilising in English

verb infantilise (Brit.)

treat as a child, treat a person as a baby; stay like a young kid; keep a person in an childish state (also infantilize)

Use "infantilise|infantilised|infantilises|infantilising" in a sentence

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

1. A changing language Other races were infantilised or Barbarised, or held up as object lessons in the perils of racial degeneration

2. ‘predictable jeers, Buffooneries, and cheap shots’ ‘The humour of Pimple films derived from theatrical burlesque, music-hall satire and from a tradition of buffoonery that embraced such infantilised characters as …

3. The interesting thing is he doesn't cross out quite sensitive political or court gossip, or the Bawdier passages – it's just the baby talk, which is both infantilising and quite sexualised

4. ‘Other races were infantilised or Barbarised, or held up as object lessons in the perils of racial degeneration.’ ‘It proposes a barbarising of the inside of a language (thus culture) such as is unavoidable for those coming to a culture from its outside.’

5. Other races were infantilised or Barbarised, or held up as object lessons in the perils of racial degeneration.: To the horror of the colonisers, the home or metropolitan culture secretly or even publicly may consider the natives more civilised than the Barbarised colonisers.