romanticized in English

verb
1
deal with or describe in an idealized or unrealistic fashion; make (something) seem better or more appealing than it really is.
the tendency to romanticize nonindustrial societies
verb

Use "romanticized" in a sentence

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

1. The miner, whose dangerous and unpleasant labour is so misguidedly romanticized, will be eliminated.

2. Among the historically accurate retelling of events, preference for the oft romanticized accounts were sometimes used.

3. Unfortunately, popular folklore eventually romanticized the leader and his tribe, reducing them almost to comic book caricatures.

4. Aunt Jemima portrays the white, romanticized notion of an Antebellum “mammy,” detached from the cruel reality of enslavement during the late 19th century

5. Germany had gone through a very rapid industrialization, and the National Socialists, the Nazis, looked back to a kind of invented, agrarian past that they romanticized.

6. Chianti from the Romans, the Renaissance and Today Tuscany, the romanticized swath of central Italy known for its rolling hills, cypress trees and stone castles, is also home to Chianti

7. A romanticized interpretation of traditional Chinese motifs, Chinoiserie (French for Chinese-esque) is a European-born artistic style as engaging today as when it was introduced in the late-17th century

8. (14) National development was reframed from Westernization to Thai-style development according to a model of romanticized self-subsistence and Abstemiousness in which agriculture and village life exist without external social and economic linkages, isolated, and self-regulated (Nartsupha, 1991; Nartsupha, 1984, 1999).

9. And, in 1972, the ever-present image of former Governor General Joseph Gallieni on the colonial monetary currency, the Madagascar-Comores CFA franc, was replaced by depictions of local flora and fauna and classic, romanticized Malagasy ethnic portraiture on the newly minted Malagasy franc (renamed again in 2005 as the Malagasy Ariary).