totalize
IPA: tˈoʊtʌɫaɪz
verb
- To combine parts to make a total.
- To treat or construe something as universal, all-embracing, or comprehensive.
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Examples of "totalize" in Sentences
- In the same sentence you totalize Rand's promotion of her work and/or retention of her money.
- Both reduce (i.e., essentialize) and totalize their experiences of modernity in single, sweeping rhetorical movements.
- We must instead recognize play as a catalyst for rupture and totalize it, in response to the affects and history of domination.
- For my part I treat the graph as referring not to sexuation but to attempts to totalize the symbolic or different ontological structures.
- There are little cracks to squirm into, of course, as nothing can ever truly totalize except in that magical, horrible moment, where the territory becomes the map.
- IMO, in trying to think through the way forward, it’s extremely important not to totalize such complex and heterogeneous social formations as “the Left” and “the Right.”
- At the same time, the university as a locus of the plasticity of thought must not totalize the presumption of translatability; absolute translation is non-existent, and translation always involves partial reduction.
- It's very much like this, seeing that the idea was over ten years ago and during that process other things came into totalize the idea; I took notes, sometimes mental notes, to build up the ideas and when I came down to it, the writing probably only took eight months but I had to spread it over three years because I had two other ghostwriting books to finish in between times.
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