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Showing results for allegorize. Search instead for allegedly terrorized.
Definitions

allegorize

[al-i-guh-rahyz] / ˈæl ɪ gəˌraɪz /




Example Sentences

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There are plenty of obvious ways a 21st-century novelist could allegorize a story like Brinkley’s.

From Seattle Times Jan. 23, 2013

He was a theater experimenter, a provider of vivid, cacophonous stage tableaus, incorporating ballads, verse and mime within demanding scripts that often used historical settings to dramatize, allude to or allegorize timeless issues.

From New York Times Apr. 3, 2012

Partly this was because Tillstrom was able to allegorize some grown-up themes.

From New York Times May 6, 2011

She has said these songs allegorize intensely personal moments in her life.

From Slate Mar. 1, 2010

To treat as allegorical; to understand in an allegorical sense; as, when a passage in a writer may understood literally or figuratively, he who gives it a figurative sense is said to allegorize it.

From Webster's Unabridged Dictionary by Webster, Noah

It tweaked the movie-cowboy archetype at a time when westerns allegorized the United States’ involvement in Vietnam.

From New York Times Jun. 22, 2023

And they often, though by no means always, center on aspects of the queer struggle—themes to which Highsmith’s novels after The Price of Salt continued to return, if only in oblique, highly allegorized fashion.

From Slate Nov. 19, 2015

Though he hardly clarifies his intention, Mailer apparently figures that he has thus allegorized Vietnam as a case of Texas-style Americans neurotically in love with war.

From Time Magazine Archive

The picture is saturated in a kind of allegorized romanticism that is curiously musty.

From Time Magazine Archive

The opposite theory interpreted myths by an Euhemeristic process, or allegorized them by regarding them as originally descriptions of the physical processes of nature.

From History of Free Thought in Reference to The Christian Religion by Farrar, Adam Storey

If it’s an allegory, it trivializes whatever it’s allegorizing.

From Washington Post Nov. 30, 2021

In 1924 he caused a ripple in sculpture and religious circles with his bronze, The Chrysalis, allegorizing mankind's evolution, from the ape.

From Time Magazine Archive

He was a superbly professional storyteller, but his work was at times flawed by facile allegorizing.

From Time Magazine Archive

Spenser states in his prefatory letter that if he shall carry this first projected labor to a successful end he may continue it in still twelve other Books, similarly allegorizing twelve political virtues.

From A History of English Literature by Fletcher, Robert Huntington

Others have understood their allegorizing about heaven as a rejection of the future life.

From Bahaism and Its Claims A Study of the Religion Promulgated by Baha Utlah and Abdul Baha by Wilson, Samuel Graham




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