¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Depersonalizes
1. depersonalize [v] - See also: depersonalize
Lexicographical Neighbors of Depersonalizes
Literary usage of Depersonalizes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1919)
"According to this view, we may say that science is the negation of the supernatural,
and religion its affirmation; science depersonalizes all things, ..."
2. The Quarterly Review by William Gifford, George Walter Prothero, John Gibson Lockhart, John Murray, Whitwell Elwin, John Taylor Coleridge, Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle, William Macpherson, William Smith (1889)
"... in the name of a spurious equality assassinates liberty ; a democracy which
depersonalizes man, disintegrates society, and leads back to barbarism. ..."
3. A Text-book in the Principles of Education by Ernest Norton Henderson (1910)
"Moreover, the act of committing a tradition to writing depersonalizes it, as it
were. It is no longer associated closely with the talent, the training, ..."
4. The Civilization of Illiteracy by Mihai Nadin (1997)
"... by using television had to accept that this was a goal for which the means
are not appropriate. Language stabilizes, induces uniformity, depersonalizes; ..."
5. The Meaning of Faith by Harry Emerson Fosdick (1917)
"For the only thing in the universe that can be consciously in earnest is personality,
and when one depersonalizes God, the remainder is a deity who has no ..."
6. Essays: Theological and Literary by Charles Carroll Everett (1901)
"The truest man of science, according to him, is the man who most successfully
depersonalizes himself. He makes of himself a mere mirror in which the world ..."
7. The Return of Christendom (1922)
"The wage-system divorces the labour-power from the labourer, and depersonalizes
and dehumanizes industry. So wealth is divorced from the work which produces ..."
8. The Free City: A Book of Neighborhood by Bouck White (1919)
"Any elaboration of trade apparatus in the conveyance of an article from producer
to consumer depersonalizes it, and therefore ..."