¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Trivialised
1. trivialise [v] - See also: trivialise
Lexicographical Neighbors of Trivialised
Literary usage of Trivialised
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Works and Life of Walter Savage Landor by Walter Savage Landor (1876)
"In English ; not in Italian: but Milton has ennobled it in our tongue, and has
trivialised it in that. He who is deficient in readiness of language, ..."
2. Study & Stage: A Year-book of Criticism by William Archer (1899)
"It is the cult of this abstract audience which has to a great extent vitiated
and trivialised the modern drama. By attaching too great importance to effects ..."
3. Culture And Local Development by Xavier Greffe, Sylvie Pflieger, Antonella Noya (2005)
"Cultural products may become trivialised if they are used as promotional come-
ons for run-of-the-mill goods that may serve the same purposes. ..."
4. The Art of Ballet by Mark Edward Perugini (1915)
"... and in the hands of any but a fine artist might have easily been trivialised.
The subject was treated with marked dramatic ability and poetic dignity, ..."
5. After Social Democracy: Politics, Capitalism and the Common Life by John Gray (1996)
"... variety of market institutions is denied or trivialised in neoliberal ideology,
which shares a commitment to economic reductionism with vulgar Marxism. ..."
6. The Book of the Homeless: (Le Livre Des Sans-foyer) by Edith Wharton (1916)
"... one looks for the key to success then, among the victims, exactly on that
ground of the apprehension pacified and almost, so to call it, trivialised. ..."