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poetize

VERB
  1. compose verses or put into verse
    He versified the ancient saga

How To Use poetize In A Sentence

  • It is not man that has "poetized" the world, it is the world that has made a poet out of man, by infinite processes of evolution, precisely in the same way that it has shaped a rose and filled it with perfume, or shaped a nightingale and filled it with song. Vanishing Roads and Other Essays
  • Here Baraka repeats the Emersonian desire to poetize American with new signs, but his appropriation shows how at the same time American's own sons were incapable of the project.
  • They strove with their full strength against those conditions panegyrized and poetized by the smirking optimists of their time, and thereby incurred the enmity of pedants and self-sufficient purists, -- were denounced and denied, belittled and belied. The Complete Works of Brann the Iconoclast, Volume 12
  • Though there were purchases to be made, they were by no means of a pressing nature, and but poorly filled up the vacancies of those strange, speculative days, — days surrounded by a shade of fear, yet poetized by sweet expectation. Two on a Tower
  • An artist can create audio and visual material under concrete motive treating it as a word in poem, and his poetize is also affected by musical and visual composition when layout its words.
  • The Countess had in the course of time poetized, as I may say, a thing which is at the antipodes to poetry — a manufacture. Honorine
  • All of us need something to poetize and idealise our life a little - something which we value for more than its use and which is a symbol of our emancipation from the mere materialism and deathly drudgery of daily life. Great Regulars: All of us in India seem to be passing through
  • The sentence of a German geographer recurred to him: "The German is bicephalous; with one head he dreams and poetizes while with the other he thinks and executes. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. (Los Cuatro Jinetes del Apocalipsis) from the Spanish of Vincente Blasco Ibanez; authorized translation by Charlotte Brewster Jordan.
  • Yet Hawthorne is essentially a domestic writer, -- a poetizer of the hearth-stone. The Life and Genius of Nathaniel Hawthorne
  • Sir Julius Cæsar, prefixed to the first-named work, the writer speaks of having "once belonged to the _Innes of Court_," and says he was "no usuall poetizer, but, to barre idlenesse, imployed that little talent the Muses conferr'd upon him in this little tract. Notes and Queries, Number 38, July 20, 1850
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