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All those things I romanticize I actually think are very, very cool.
2
It is easy to romanticize an African past you don't know, said Neblett.
3
The other idea, however she might try to romanticize its bravery, was repugnant.
4
We tend to... romanticize New York City but it has its share of challenges.
5
I don't trust people, and I don't romanticize their motives.
1
We are taught to glamorize the struggle, even at the expense of our own joy.
2
And the human mind always seems to magnify the present difficulties, and glamorize the possible future.
3
We won't exploit it or glamorize it.
4
We have been conditioned to glamorize BS.
5
It's very hard not to glamorize it.
1
The big giants glamourise your periods, if you see the TV commercials.
2
He celebrates his neighbourhood but does not glamourise criminality, deconstructing the gangster mentality rather than glorifying it.
3
The pool hall throughout the US remains a wonderfully disreputable place, despite all the misguided American efforts to glamourise the game.
4
Recently, a Hong Kong romantic comedy Love in a puff put smoking at centre stage, with numerous smoking scenes and words that glamourise smoking.
5
Never again must men of violence be glamourised in the media.
Usage of romanticising in English
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But he says there's no time for romanticising about missed horseriding and boating.
2
Master Cheng is an especially conservative version of the tale, romanticising everything it touches.
3
Another added she "disagrees with romanticising unemployment during this difficult time".
4
I think she was romanticising that tortured-artist thing, which I don't buy into any more.
5
They have a duty to portray illness accurately, as they must avoid harmfully romanticising dying.
6
There is no romanticising of suffragette activities here.
7
She does not at all suggest that the past was perfect; there is no romanticising of culture.
8
A British Empire themed restaurant in Australia has been accused of racism and romanticising the colonial era.
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You're just romanticising what you haven't got.
10
One user pointed out how it was concerning that so many people were "romanticising" the character.
11
But some declared the kinky sex scenes between a kidnapper and his victim were "romanticising Stockholm syndrome".
12
Midnight Sun could be read as Meyer's attempt at a do-over, following criticism of Twilight for romanticising a coercive relationship.
13
Warton and Hurd and other romanticising critics of the eighteenth century were perpetually upholding Ariosto and Tasso against French detraction:
14
Guyon and I warned each other about being swayed by nostalgia and romanticising the wide ideological battles of our past.
15
Resurrection-Dirilis, a big commercial hit, focuses on the onset of the empire in the 13th century, romanticising wars and warriors.
16
Women's activists accuse the film of glamourising violence against women by romanticising male violence and abuse as well as glorifying sex trafficking.