Use "popularise|popularised|popularises|popularising" in a sentence

1. This work popularised the modern meaning of the word "snob".

2. (a) whether the Ministry has made a scheme to popularise Hindi language in other countries;

3. Basophils regilds chorizontal justiciar preesteem popularised subarid Amoebaea tamponing Jocelynne Phainopepla auroras

4. The Corollary of this, that combinations are necessarily against the public interest, Smith also popularised.

5. Liszt bore the expense of publishing the transcription himself and played it many times to help popularise the original score.

6. (c) whether the Ministry has made any scheme to popularise Bhojpuri language in other countries and if so, the details thereof; and

7. He was influenced by Ernst Mach and probably the Russian Machist Alexander Bogdanov in his pedagogical approach to popularising science.

8. Baulk road was popularised by Isambard Kingdom Brunel for his 7 ft 1 ⁄ 4 in (2,140 mm) broad gauge railways in

9. Running Man (奔跑吧兄弟) plays a crucial role in popularising the Yili Ambrosial Greek style yoghurt in Malaysia.

10. Eratosthenes' method to calculate the Earth's Circumference has been lost; what has been preserved is the simplified version described by Cleomedes to popularise the discovery

11. The K-pop trainee system was popularised by Lee Soo-man, the founder of S.M. Entertainment, as part of a concept labelled cultural technology.

12. Crass popularised the anarcho-punk movement of the punk subculture, advocating direct action, animal rights, feminism, anti-fascism, and environmentalism.

13. Michell's book The View Over Atlantis mixed ley lines with folklore and archeology; these ideas became popularised as "earth mysteries".

14. She helped to popularise the practice of variolation (an early type of immunisation), which had been witnessed by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and Charles Maitland in Constantinople.

15. Afrobeat is a combination of traditional Yoruba music, jazz, highlife, funk, and chanted vocals, fused with percussion and vocal styles, popularised in Africa in the 1970s.

16. He made wearing tweed, Homburg hats and Norfolk jackets fashionable, and popularised the wearing of black ties with dinner jackets, instead of white tie and tails.

17. The French have been credited with inventing the bidet and popularising pissoirs or public urinals, and now they can add the biodegradable and portable toilet to their name.

18. "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs" is a slogan popularised by Karl Marx in his 1875 Critique of the Gotha Program.

19. A robust example of a Bolection, a moulding popularised by Christopher Wren following his tours of Italy and seen in his work throughout Hampton Court Palace

20. Of Manchu origin, the Cheongsam, also known as the qipao, was popularised by upper-class women and Chinese socialites in Shanghai during the early 20 th century

21. Shelley wrote in a biographical style popularised by the 18th-century critic Samuel Johnson in his Lives of the Poets (1779–81), combining secondary sources, memoir and anecdote, and authorial evaluation.

22. Generally understood as an inadvertent descent to the low, vulgar, and ludicrous in writing or art, the term "Bathos" was popularised by Pope, who used it to satirise his contemporaries

23. Generally understood as an inadvertent descent to the low, vulgar, and ludicrous in writing or art, the term "Bathos" was popularised by Pope, who used it to satirise his contemporaries.

24. " Cavatina " is a 1970 classical guitar piece by British composer Stanley Myers written for the film The Walking Stick (1970), and popularised as the theme from The Deer Hunter some eight years later

25. "Cavatina" is a 1970 classical guitar piece by British composer Stanley Myers written for the film "The Walking Stick" (1970), and popularised as the theme from the file "The Deer Hunter" some eight years later

26. The Cyanotype process uses a mixture of iron compounds, which when exposed to UV light and washed in water oxidise to create Prussian Blue images. The technique was invented in 1841 by Sir JohnHerschel and was popularised by photographer and botanist Anna Atkins.

27. The term was popularised toward the end of the 19th century by British sexologist Havelock Ellis, who defined Autoeroticism as "the phenomena of spontaneous sexual emotion generated in the absence of an external stimulus proceeding, directly or indirectly, from another person."

28. Religious Studies) on 'Myth in an Antimythical environment: the case of Buddhism', is one of the very best: sober, original, well-argued and technically almost faultless.7 In contrast to Pike's unpretentious popularisation of classical myths, Clasquin's popularising of the 'skilful' approach to myth in the long history of Buddhism brilliantly

29. Moore acknowledged that Shah had made a contribution of sorts in popularising a humanistic Sufism, and had "brought energy and resource to his self-aggrandisement", but ended with the damning conclusion that Shah's was "a 'Sufism' without self-sacrifice, without self-transcendence, without the aspiration of gnosis, without tradition, without the Prophet, without the Qur'an, without Islam, and without God.

30. Aleatoricism (/ˌeɪ̯liəˈtɔrəsɪzm̩, -ˈtɒr-, ˌæli-/ ey-lee-uh-TAWR-uh-siz-uhm, -TOR-, al-ee) or aleatorism, the noun associated with the adjectival Aleatory and aleatoric is a term popularised by the musical composer Pierre Boulez, but also Witold Lutosławski and Franco Evangelisti, for compositions resulting from "actions made by chance ", with its etymology deriving from alea, Latin word for " dice ".