¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Singularizing
1. singularize [v] - See also: singularize
Lexicographical Neighbors of Singularizing
Literary usage of Singularizing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Reluctant Sheriff: The United States After the Cold War by Richard N. Haass (1997)
"... to help avoid a reemergence of Korean-Japanese tensions, and to
avoid "singularizing" Japan as the only country in the area still hosting a large
number ..."
2. Victorian Prose Masters: Thackeray--Carlyle--George Eliot--Matthew Arnold by William Crary Brownell (1901)
"No writer has ever achieved such distinction in singularizing ineptitude by the
piquancy of his style. It came to vary directly with the varying temper ..."
3. Victorian Prose Masters: Thackeray--Carlyle--George Eliot--Matthew Arnold by William Crary Brownell (1901)
"No writer has ever achieved such distinction in singularizing ineptitude by the
piquancy of his style. It came to vary directly with the varying temper that ..."
4. Victorian Prose Masters: Thackeray--Carlyle--George Eliot--Matthew Arnold by William Crary Brownell (1901)
"No writer has ever achieved such distinction in singularizing ineptitude by the
piquancy of his style. It came to vary directly • with the varying temper ..."
5. Victorian Prose Masters: Thackeray--Carlyle--George Eliot--Matthew Arnold by William Crary Brownell (1901)
"No writer has ever achieved such distinction in singularizing ineptitude by the
piquancy of his style. It came to vary directly with the varying temper that ..."
6. The Journal of Speculative Philosophy: Ed. by Wm. T. Harris edited by William Torrey Harris (1878)
"Its truth is this concrete oneness of subject and object, "Ye in me and I in
you," this singularizing ..."
7. The Literary Movement in France During the Nineteenth Century by Georges Pellissier (1897)
"He possesses all the defects of a vulgar education, — the mania for singularizing
himself, the passion for leading others, also the tactless habit of ..."