This, of course, is rather difficult both to do and to generalize.
2
Results obtained in randomized trials may not easily generalize to target populations.
3
Can I make just a quick comment just to generalize on that.
4
She couldn't have handled many violent sex crimes, because we do generalize.
5
I am beginning to generalize-thevery thing I was resolute to avoid.
1
To popularize scientific knowledge is one of the most difficult of tasks.
2
Many popularize and diffuse: some reap and gather on their own account.
3
EBONY not only celebrated and also helped popularize African-American food as American food.
4
To popularize this idea, a Pan-American Exposition was arranged at Buffalo in 1901.
5
The platform didn't just popularize the concept of Stories-itpioneered them.
1
The validation using a different cohort is necessary to generalise the conclusion.
2
What I learnt from this was: be cautious when seeking to generalise.
3
I would be amazed if it were possible to generalise in this way.
4
To generalise, the right once believed that success was down to biological inheritance.
5
There is no way out of the difficulty so long as we generalise.
1
Indeed, Mr. Max Müller has somewhere remarked that I popularise Mannhardt's ideas.
2
MMA stars litter the new media landscape to popularise their brands.
3
It was part of Beddington's plan both to popularise and support British artists.
4
Its aim is to popularise Earth sciences by reaching out to a wider public.
5
Paul McCartney has won a major US award for his work to popularise classical music.
1
Our associations with Nature vulgarize it and rob it of its divinity.
2
When Mr. Holcroft appears he'll drive you from the dwelling which you vulgarize.
3
Powerful as man is, and pushing, he cannot wholly vulgarize them.
4
But tourists do vulgarize it; and I suppose we did so, just like others.
5
Please don't let the mention of money vulgarize a little friendly act like this.
1
Formerly we used to canonise our great men; nowadays we vulgarise them.
2
He loved his familiar surroundings, for nothing can vulgarise Oxford.
3
But these manifold household labours did not vulgarise Hilda's character.
4
But that is to vulgarise the question.
5
Why amusing to miscall, exaggerate, and vulgarise?
6
There is a flavour of sauer kraut about that unhappy tongue that would vulgarise a Queen if she talked it.
7
From such an ignoble spectacle as that of poor Mrs. Lincoln,- aspectacleto vulgarise a whole nation,-aristocraciesundoubtedly preserve us.
8
Money won't vulgarise Jean as it does so many people, but it may turn her into a very burdened, anxious pilgrim.
9
You must admit, Hirst, that a little Italian town even would vulgarise the whole scene, would detract from the vastness-thesense of elemental grandeur.
10
Paula was still charming, but it must be confessed a trifle vulgarised.
11
Blondin vulgarised Niagara; Jonathan is going to turn it into a colossal mill-sewer.
12
It was the hour vulgarised in drawing-room ballads as the 'gloaming.'
13
The thought is too solemn to be vulgarised by pulpit rhetoric.
14
How she vulgarises that pretty girl, her cousin, by mere contrast!
15
All the poetry of Italy has been dried up, and the whole country vulgarised.
16
He viewed with desperation the speed with which Britain was becoming vulgarised and uglified.