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Meanings of become stereotyped in English
We have no meanings for "become stereotyped" in our records yet.
Usage of become stereotyped in English
1
After a time a certain ritual dance (for rain) would becomestereotyped and generally adopted.
2
If all science is organized and supervised by the State, it will rapidly becomestereotyped and dead.
3
Of course much was bound to becomestereotyped and fixed, but much was ever fluctuating and new.
4
The issue comes in where these filters are all we live by, and we becomestereotyped and inflexible.
5
As the charges against Luther have becomestereotyped, so the rejoinder cannot hope to bring forward any new facts.
6
The phrase had becomestereotyped.
7
Though the biological sciences had long ago becomestereotyped in respect of fundamental theories, they continued to produce many practical benefits.
8
Hence, grammar and language have becomestereotyped as teaching without a thought as to whether undigested words may be intellectual poison.
9
But he's becomestereotyped as a writer of bravura arias, for which he has been famously celebrated by the great Cecilia Bartoli.
10
Thoughtful people are beginning to realize that moral precepts, imposed upon humanity through religious terror, have becomestereotyped and have therefore lost all vitality.
11
These things becamestereotyped as education, as the manner of men is.
12
Successive scribes re-copied the error without discovering it and so it becamestereotyped.
13
The story was set forth baldly and simply, and the language becamestereotyped.
14
But the very variations, in course of time, becamestereotyped.
15
Some features of the portraits becamestereotyped, especially the hands.
16
Century by century, agriculture withdrew from the hills and deserts, craftsmanship deteriorated, thought becamestereotyped.