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Meanings of
romanticise
in inglês
espanhol
glamorizar
Back to the meaning
Interpret romantically.
romanticize
glamorize
glamourise
espanhol
glamorizar
Synonyms
Examples for "
romanticize
"
romanticize
glamorize
glamourise
Examples for "
romanticize
"
1
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
romanticise
in inglês
1
Critics of gentrification
romanticise
working-class poverty, goes the main line of argument.
2
I
romanticise
this as seeing species roses as the essence of rose.
3
But we cannot afford to
romanticise
the realities of modern healthcare provision.
4
There is not much to
romanticise
in the career of Guy Fawkes.
5
She writes well she refuses to embroider or
romanticise
;
her story is unforgettable.
6
We might be as well off letting Jack and his like
romanticise
rain.
7
Even socially conscious songwriters
romanticise
the gun if they consider the cause righteous.
8
That leaves you free to
romanticise
,
and not trouble to consider the hardships of reality.
9
It's hard not to
romanticise
election campaigns of old.
10
Public debate in the West is so fractious it is tempting to
romanticise
about the alternative.
11
At the same time, it is not a place you can
romanticise
-even from afar.
12
The delta proper, with all its wild beauty and lack of pretension, is easy to
romanticise
.
13
Lest we
romanticise
this clubland radical too much, we are conducting our chat in a Malmaison.
14
You kind of
romanticise
your high school or college years, but you bury being 13 years old.
15
Apparently, men think about it every seven seconds whereas women contemplate it less but
romanticise
it more.
16
Nonetheless, the sisters
romanticise
the lives of the working classes, as they do most people they encounter.
Other examples for "romanticise"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
About this term
romanticise
Verb
Indicative · Present
Frequent collocations
romanticise a jeans
romanticise apartheid
romanticise election
romanticise rain
romanticise the extent
More collocations
Translations for
romanticise
espanhol
glamorizar
idealizar
romantizar
Romanticise
through the time