thematicize

English

Etymology

thematic + -ize

Verb

thematicize (third-person singular simple present thematicizes, present participle thematicizing, simple past and past participle thematicized)

  1. To make into or explore as a theme.
    • 1979, Jovan Đorđević, Political Science in Yugoslavia: Selected Works, page 64:
      As opposed to this, politicology should thematicize practical life as a whole, namely, that part of life in which people joint not as a private political being in a private, separate political community, but as human beings in a community in which they reproduce a separate form of their historical existence.
    • 2005, Hans van Stralen, Choices and Conflict: Essays on Literature and Existentialism, →ISBN:
      In this way these autobiographies thematicize an important given within existentialism, namely the tension between the enforced identity of the other (in this case: the parents and educators) and the need the authentic individual feels to discover his essence by himself.
    • 2005, Gary Backhaus, ‎John Murungi, Lived Topographies and Their Mediational Forces, →ISBN, page ix:
      The project behind this conceptualization is to thematicize the spatial component of all phenomena.
    • 2014, Jan Swafford, Beethoven: Anguish and Triumph : a Biography, →ISBN, page 983:
      That Beethoven would make the idea of an arpeggio into a motif is characteristic of his drive to thematicize every element of music.
  2. (linguistics) To insert a thematic vowel.
    • 1993, Ádám Makkai, Ecolinguistics: towards a new paradigm for the science of language?, →ISBN:
      If, on the other hand, /T/ stands under the N or NP marked as GOAL/TARGET/VICTIM, the transduction protocol will thematicize the DO noun, in our case Caesar, and the rest of the lexo-tactics, independently learned and remembered by the speakers, will adjust the verb as Aux + Tense + V + Past Participle and the original Agent/Subject of the race will show up as by + N in sentence final position.
    • 2001, Jane Garry, ‎Carl R. Galvez Rubino, Facts about the World's Languages, →ISBN, page 124:
      However, there is a normal unmarked order, and other word orders thematicize or topicalize.
    • 2017 -, Mate Kapović, ‎Anna Giacalone Ramat, ‎Paolo Ramat, The Indo-European Languages, →ISBN:
      Celtic tended to thematicize athematic verbs and to generalize a single grade of ablaut, usually the zero grade of the plural:...
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