¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Singularized
1. singularize [v] - See also: singularize
Lexicographical Neighbors of Singularized
Literary usage of Singularized
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Philosophical Writings of Richard Burthogge by Richard Burthogge (1921)
"... so Individuated and singularized (as the Mosaical Spirit is supposed to be by
a Congruous fit Body,) that Really it has other Affections and Properties, ..."
2. The Philosophical Writings of Richard Burthogge by Richard Burthogge (1921)
"... so Individuated and singularized (as the Mosaical Spirit is supposed to be by
a Congruous fit Body,) that Really it has other Affections and Properties, ..."
3. Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society by Massachusetts Historical Society (1900)
"The 3d, a worthy young man, not of her acquaintance, whom all lamented, Visitors,
Professors, and students, but he had unfortunately too much singularized ..."
4. Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society by Massachusetts Historical Society (1900)
"The 3d, a worthy young man, not of her acquaintance, whom all lamented, Visitors,
Professors, and students, but he had unfortunately too much singularized ..."
5. Southey's Common-place Book by Robert Southey (1850)
"250. Gavel-kind observed by the Irish till the 4th James I. 257. — The “fabulous
and ingeniously singularized old Macha, whose antiquity the Irish ..."
6. The New York Times Current History (1917)
"The Russian cannot be singularized. You have to think of Russians, infinite in
plurality, a slow-moving, ominous, imposing mass. They come in lines ten and ..."
7. New York Times Current History (1916)
"The Russian cannot be singularized. You have to think of Russians, infinite in
plurality, a slow-moving, ominous, imposing mass. They come in lines ten and ..."
8. Southey's Common-place Book by Robert Southey (1876)
"250. Gavel-kind observed by the Irish till the 4th James I. 257. — The " fabulous
and ingeniously singularized old Macha, whose antiquity the Irish ..."