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Definition of Radicalize
1. Verb. Make more radical in social or political outlook. "Her work in the developing world radicalized her"
Definition of Radicalize
1. Verb. (transitive) to make radical ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Radicalize
1. [v -IZED, -IZING, -IZES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Radicalize
Literary usage of Radicalize
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Biographical Sketch of Linton Stephens, (late Associate Justice of the by James D. Waddell (1877)
"That was a proposition to sanction all the usurpations—to quit being Democrats—to
radicalize the Democratic party, and accept the new principle of ..."
2. Biographical Sketch of Linton Stephens: (late Associate Justice of the by James D. Waddell (1877)
"That was a proposition to sanction all the usurpations—to quit being Democrats—to
radicalize the Democratic party, and accept the new principle of ..."
3. The Contemporary Review (1872)
"... motives, indeed, which can radicalize the fiercest Tory, or chain up the
fiercest Radical But so long as the old Whiggism was true to itself, ..."
4. The Greville Memoirs: A Journal of the Reigns of King George IV. and King by Charles Greville, Henry Reeve (1883)
"... corporate boroughs, for he assumes as an undoubted fact that the new councils
will be Radical, and that their influence will radicalize the boroughs. ..."
5. The Greville Memoirs: A Journal of the Reigns of King George IV. and King by Charles Greville (1875)
"... corporate boroughs, for he assumes as an undoubted fact that the new councils
will be Radical, and that their influence will radicalize the boroughs. ..."
6. The South in the Building of the Nation: A History of the Southern States by Walter Lynwood Fleming (1909)
"In 1870 the legislature passed an act which was intended to "radicalize" the
institution; the majority of the old trustees were removed, ..."
7. Reconstruction in Mississippi by James Wilford Garner (1902)
"It appears that no attempt was made to " radicalize " the faculty, and there is
no evidence that more than one appointment was influenced by purely ..."