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9 Sentences With "intellectualised"

How to use intellectualised in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "intellectualised" and check conjugation/comparative form for "intellectualised". Mastering all the usages of "intellectualised" from sentence examples published by news publications.

A silly charge, since he forced the songs into (unsatisfactory) French, and since, in best French mode, he was swiftly intellectualised, compared to Victor Hugo and the existentialists.
"Set up knowledge academy on traditional healing: Pairin " , Daily Express, 6 October 2004. In Sarawak, it has been said that the animism practised by the Ibans and other related groups is the most developed, elaborated, and intellectualised in the world.Cavendish, Richard, "Man, Myth & Magic: An Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Supernatural (vol. 3)", New York: Marshall Cavendish Corp.
For example, Mr and Mrs Mole's divorce reflects rising divorce rates in the 1980s, and living together unmarried was becoming a norm. Adrian's mother becomes a staunch feminist and briefly joins the Greenham Common campaigners. Pandora, Adrian's love interest, and her parents are part of an intellectualised and left-wing middle class that attempted to embrace the working class. Humour arises from the outworking of larger social forces within a very ordinary household in a very ordinary part of Middle England.
His lectures given at the University of Mumbai on Justice Mahadev Govind Ranade were published in his book Ranade – The Renaissance Man. In 2006 he published The cloister's pale: a biography of the University of Mumbai which interweaves the history of the university with the history of the city. His 2009 book Mumbai De-Intellectualised: Rise and Decline of a Culture of Thinking explores the growth of intellectual activity in Mumbai under British colonial rule, which continued into the 1960s and 1970s, and discusses the causes of the gradual decline in more recent times.
Cardinal Calls for Third Vatican Council He was one of the cardinal electors in the 2005 papal conclave that selected Pope Benedict XVI. He resigned from the Pontifical Council in March 2006, a month after the Congregation for the Causes of Saints approved the beatification of 188 Japanese martyrs from the 17th century. His late brother Minoru served Crown Prince Akihito as East Palace Chamberlain (tōgūjijū, 東宮侍従). Cardinal Hamao instructed Akihito in Latin, but he criticised a perceived "excessively Westernised" bias and "over-intellectualised" theology in the Roman Catholic Church.
The whole question is problematic, however, because Finland's most famous architect, Alvar Aalto, was also seen as someone who broke the mold of pure modernism, someone who indeed talked about extending the notion of rationalism. Pietilä saw his work as organic architecture, but also very much as modern. Pietilä intellectualised his position, and was well-read in philosophy and modern literature. He was very much concerned with the issue of a phenomenology of place, epitomised by the Student Union building Dipoli (1961–1966) on the Otaniemi campus of Helsinki University of Technology.
Xiangxi area. Shamanism was the prevalent modality of pre-Han dynasty Chinese indigenous religion. The Chinese usage distinguishes the Chinese "Wuism" tradition ( Wūjiào; properly shamanic, in which the practitioner has control over the force of the god and may travel to the underworld) from the tongji tradition (; southern mediumship, in which the practitioner does not control the force of the god but is guided by it), and from non-Han Chinese Altaic shamanisms ( sàmǎnjiào) which are practised in northern provinces. With the rise of Confucian orthodoxy in the Han period (206 BCE–220 CE), shamanic traditions found an institutionalised and intellectualised form within the esoteric philosophical discourse of Taoism.
99, pp.315-316 Merz stated the following with reference to his history: > It is the object of these volumes to fix, if possible, this possession; to > rescue from oblivion that which appears to me our secret property; in the > last and dying hour of a remarkable age to throw the light upon the fading > outlines of its mental life; to try to trace them, and with the aid of all > possible information, gained from the written testimonies or the records of > others, to work them into a coherent picture, which may give to those who > follow some idea of the peculiar manner in which our age looked upon the > world and life, how it intellectualised and spiritualised them.J. T. Merz, A > History of European Thought in the Nineteenth Century. Vol. I (Edinburgh: > William Blackwood and Sons, 1907), p. 13.
Burstall later said of the film: > I have a special place in my heart for it, because it was my first feature > and in some ways autobiographical. But I wince when I see it, except for the > few energy points which are mainly in the flashbacks. I think of the first > ten years of my film work, up to and including 2000 Weeks as my > apprenticeship... I don't believe the acting in 2000 Weeks is bad so much as > a question of actors being asked to say unsayable things, and act unactable > things. It was too deficient in energy and too much of it was in an > intellectualised form, instead of action. David Stratton wrote of it: > 2,000 Weeks was an important film; important for what it had to say, > important in the courage it took to make it in the first place.

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