attitudinise
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Italian attitudine (“attitude, pose, posture”) + English ise (a variant of -ize (suffix forming verbs meaning ‘to do [something denoted by the word to which it is attached]’)): see further at attitudinize.
Verb
[edit]attitudinise (third-person singular simple present attitudinises, present participle attitudinising, simple past and past participle attitudinised)
- Non-Oxford British English standard form of attitudinize.
- 1879, James Anthony Froude, chapter XIV, in Cæsar: A Sketch, London: Longmans, Green, and Co., →OCLC, page 194:
- In every line that he wrote Cicero was attitudinising for posterity, or reflecting on the effect of his conduct upon his interests or his reputation.
- 1901, Joseph Conrad, Ford M. Hueffer [i.e., Ford Madox Ford], chapter 11, in The Inheritors: An Extravagant Story, London: William Heinemann, →OCLC, page 178:
- Radet was a cadaverous, weather-worn, passion-worn individual, badger-grey, and worked up into a grotesquely attitudinised fury of injured self-esteem
Derived terms
[edit]- attitudinisation
- attitudiniser
- attitudinising (adjective, noun)