trivialise
IPA: trˈɪvjʌɫaɪz
verb
- Non-Oxford British English standard spelling of trivialize. [(transitive) To make something appear trivial]
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Examples of "trivialise" in Sentences
- It seems to trivialise the accident.
- Please stop trying to trivialise him.
- To make the comparison is to trivialise history.
- Please do not trivialise such a sensitive issue.
- I found it, let's trivialise the Odysseus article.
- I'm not trying to trivialise that – it's a real issue.
- That really does sound like you want to trivialise marriage.
- Devoting so much detail to this programme trivialises Belsen.
- I think it would trivialise and demean these appalling events.
- These are an absolute farce, and trivialise the nature ofWikipedia.
- We are trying to trivialise the Great War, when people fought for our freedoms.
- Many might think that in doing so I trivialise the struggles undergone by people of colour under that heinous system.
- Where you trivialise the effects of prescriptivism in critique, I consider this highly naive in light of its socio-political uses in linguistics.
- The Russian singer insists that the Braveheart star is attempting to "trivialise" the alleged abuse by filing his own extortion claims against her, reports
- Where you trivialise the consequences of such prescriptivism on the grounds that reviewers have no “genuine power” to prescribe and that “even the shallowest reader is easily able to read the critique/review critically, i.e., reject it,” I would say this is a level of dismissive complacency I have to strive not to over-react to.
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