Barbarized names are the outward and visible signs of barbarized ideas.
But all these things have not barbarized his mind, as they have Gregory's.
But this was not in the seventh, eighth, and ninth centuries, when art was but a decadent and barbarized survival of the antique Christian manner, nor in the tenth and eleventh.
He uses terms without adequately comprehending them, and thus affords one of the myriad examples of how, under decadent orbarbarized conditions, phrases may outlive an intelligent understanding of their meaning.
In drawing from its spiritual heritage, an age takes what it cares for; and if comparatively decadent or barbarized or childlike in its intellectual affinities, it will still manage to draw what is like itself.
They exemplify, moreover, the fact, so many aspects of which have been already noticed, of transitional and partly barbarized communities drawing from a greater past according to their simpler needs.
They barbarized the language down to the rudeness of their faculties.
After the pagan times, another whole scheme was that of Augustine, or again, that of Gregory the Great, though barbarized and hardened.
A dim perception of the requirements of the modern world has inspired the various schemes for a barbarized and simplified Latin.
Both this and the barbarized Latin schemes are fairly easy and certainly simpler than the real languages, but they are shocking to the ear, and produce the effect of mutilation of language.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "barbarized" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.