Lawsonize
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Lawson + -ize. Named after American businessman Thomas W. Lawson, co-founder of the controversial Amalgamated Copper Mining Company and later author of Frenzied Finance, which told the story of the amalgamation in an aggressively one-sided manner.
Verb
[edit]Lawsonize (third-person singular simple present Lawsonizes, present participle Lawsonizing, simple past and past participle Lawsonized)
- (obsolete, early 20th century, US, usually derogatory) To amalgamate.
- 1906, The National Engineer:
- A little Lawsonizing might do the department mentioned a power of good in the way of housecleaning.
- 1909, State Teachers Association, Proceedings of the New York State Teachers Association ... Annual Meeting, New York:
- Their spelling would often make Josh Billings envious and their logic is only in process and hasn't yet been “ Lawsonized.” But we don't worry over their crudity while they are learning to strike out.
- 1913, Pacific Marine Review:
- I will add right here that if there was ever any industry in this country that needed Lawsonizing any more than the whaling and latter day merchant marine does, I have not heard of it.
- (obsolete, early 20th century, US, usually derogatory) To harshly criticize, to use the press to condemn a rival business.
- 1904, Irving P. Fox, The Spatula:
- Admitting Mr. Bok's right to play to the gallery if he wishes, why can't he play fair? Why can't he Lawsonize things he knows something about ?
- 1905, Life:
- He could Lawsonize the theatrical world with some very diverting 'frenzied drama ,' no doubt.
- 1917, The Magazine of Wall Street:
- [T]he time was when the public feeling against the Standard Oil has been Tarbellized and Lawsonized into almost a fever-heat.