systematized in English

verb
1
arrange according to an organized system; make systematic.
Galen set about systematizing medical thought
verb
    systemisesystemizesystematise

Use "systematized" in a sentence

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

1. 27 It was first systematized by Gratian of Bologna in the twelfth century.

2. Synonyms for Codified include systematised, systematized, organised, organized, systemized, tabulated, arranged, catalogued, categorised and categorized

3. Abduction is the least familiar mode of reasoning and the mode that was systematized most recently

4. Anthropometry is a series of systematized measuring techniques that express quantitatively the dimensions of the human body and skeleton

5. Aristocratically awe-inspiring Every inch of Pyramid Axis has been designed to delight, planned to precision and systematized to succeed your expectations

6. Bibliographical Journals periodical publications devoted to the critical and Bibliographical elucidation of new books, the systematized enumeration of published works, and the understanding of bibliographic work

7. However, it is ahistorical to suggest, as many authors do, that Aristippus systematized this view in terms of a negative telos, i.e., pain as the ultimate end of all evils corresponding to pleasure as the ultimate end of all goods.

8. Herbart (q.v.) apperception is that process by which an aggregate or “mass” of presentations becomes systematized (Apperceptions-system) by the accretion of new elements, either sense-given or product of the inner workings of the mind

9. Allotypy and Haplotypes Within Human IgG Heavy and Light Chains In 1976 the World Health Organization sponsored an expert committee meeting at which the nomenclature for human immu-noglobulin allotypes was systematized and a numerical system was proposed to replace the alphabetical system (Table 1).22,23

10. Algebra (n.) "formal mathematics; the analysis of equations; the art of reasoning about quantitative relations by the aid of a compact and highly systematized notation," 1550s, from Medieval Latin Algebra, from Arabic "al-mukhtasar fi hisab al-jabr wa al-muqabala" ("the compendium on calculation by restoring and balancing"), the title of the famous 9c