mangonize
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Latin mangōnizō (“to adorn wares for sale”), from mangō (“dealer who adorns his wares to make them look more valuable”) (the source of English monger) + -izō (“-ize”).
Verb
[edit]mangonize (third-person singular simple present mangonizes, present participle mangonizing, simple past and past participle mangonized)
- (transitive, obsolete) To make (something) appear more attractive or appealing.
- 1642, Thomas Barton, “Section II”, in ΑΠΟΔΕΙΞΙΣ ΤΟΥ ΑΝΤΙΤΕΙΧΙΣΜΑΤΟΣ. [APODEIXIS TOU ANTITEICHISMATOS.] Or, A Tryall of the Covnter-scarfe, Made 1642. […], London: Printed by Thomas Purslow, for Andrew Crooke, […], published 1643, →OCLC, page 16:
- [Y]our Mercuriall wit hath mangonized a Gigantean fury with an humble hue.
- 1902, Edward Washburn Hopkins, The Religions of India, page 300:
- What little seems to be authentic history is easily told; nor are, for our present purpose, of much value the legends, which mangonize the life of Buddha. They will be found in every book that treats of the subject, [...]