medievalise
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]medievalise (third-person singular simple present medievalises, present participle medievalising, simple past and past participle medievalised)
- Alternative form of medievalize
- 1860 July 6, The Building News and Engineering Journal[1], volume 6, page 528:
- Censure is also laid upon what is termed the prevailing fashion of medievalising modern school-rooms, where only a small portion of the window is made to open partially, and the greater portion of the glass is cemented into grooves in the jambs and mullions.
- 1887, Alois Brandl, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the English Romantic School, page 353:
- The Monthly Review charged him with the style "of a sexton;" with outdoing even the Germans in tales of horror; with being full of platonic, metaphysical incomprehensibilities; they complained that his æsthetic lectures had had a pernicious effect; had held up the golden age of Pope to contempt, and contributed more than any cause to "medievalise" the taste of his countrymen.
- 1993, Graham Phillips, King Arthur: The True Story, page 25:
- It could have been from this poem that Geoffrey derived Avalon and the magical sword Caliburn, and Robert de Boron took his idea for the Holy Grail; both writers making attempts to medievalise ancient, mythological concepts.
- 2014, Robert Crawford, Bannockburns: Scottish Independence and the Literary Imagination, 1314-2014[2], page 102:
- Based partly on the Border ballad 'Gilpin Horner', Scott's poem is on the whole a medievalising concoction set in an Ossianic zone of lastness, fading and death.