¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Trivializing
1. trivialize [v] - See also: trivialize
Lexicographical Neighbors of Trivializing
Literary usage of Trivializing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Sexual Harassment in the Federal Workplace: Trends, Progress, Continuing by Evangeline W. Swift (1996)
"Concerns About Overemphasizing or trivializing Sexual Harassment. Many participants
in our survey expressed a concern that labeling too many things as ..."
2. Contemporary Composers by Daniel Gregory Mason (1918)
"They all represent in one way or another that trivializing of the great art, that
degradation of it to sensationalism, luxury, or mere illustration, ..."
3. Sea-Changes: American Foreign Policy in a World Transformed by Nicholas X. Rizopoulos (1990)
"... thus trivializing the important work of international agencies such as the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, whose staffs might accordingly lose a ..."
4. Coleridge's Literary Criticism by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John William Mackail (1908)
"Great harm is done by bad poets in trivializing beautiful expressions and images,
and associating disgust and indifference with the technical forms of ..."
5. Parents, Peers and Pot II: Parents in Action by Marsha Manatt (1996)
"... to confront the opposition as they see it: a society that has spawned a youthful
drug culture and is moving rapidly toward trivializing human existence. ..."
6. Defense Policy in the Reagan Administration edited by William P. Snyder, James Brown (1997)
"Without trivializing the military threat to the United States and its allies,
congressional observers feared that the President's approach would be self- ..."
7. Anima Poetæ from the Unpublished Note-books of Samuel Taylor Coleridge by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1895)
"Great harm is done by bad poets in trivializing beautiful expressions and images
and associating disgust and indifference with the technical forms of poetry ..."
8. Anima Poetæ from the Unpublished Note-books of Samuel Taylor Coleridge by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1895)
"Great harm is done by bad poets in trivializing beautiful expressions and images
and associating disgust and indifference with the technical forms of poetry ..."