Kowalevsky would have seen in the ascidian larva a common prototype of the vertebrate series; the followers of Von Baer would have popularised the embryological conception of the single origin of animal life.
And the fact that this theory has become popularised tells us that the times were ripe to fertilise its renovating principles into practical action.
But in our own day, the theory has been marvellously illuminated and popularised by Cesare Lombroso, and precisely on its pathological side.
The national product has won a complete victory over the foreign article, the importation of which is now negligible; and it has also popularised the liquid dear to Cambrinus, which ten years ago was still a luxury.
They popularisedand gave an immense extension to mysticism of every kind, good and bad.
It is not merely that 'Epicureanism popularised inevitably turns to vice.
The stories of the Bastille, popularised by the refugee Renneville, gave an incorrect idea of the French administration.
When they had made the reading public familiar with doctrines hitherto confined to the schools, they disappeared, leaving it to others in England and France to give those now popularised doctrines a literary expression.
The a posteriori argument has been popularised in England by Paley, who has ably endeavored to hide the weakness of his demonstration under an abundance of irrelevant illustrations.
But to the method he so popularised may be attributed the grandest discoveries of modern times.
At least one fruit, the greengage, is named from a person, Sir William Gage, a gentleman of Suffolk, who popularised its cultivation early in the 18th century.
A member of the Parmentier family popularised the cultivation of the potato in France just before the Revolution, hence potage Parmentier, potato soup.
Its present meaning is an attempt at avoiding the mention of the inevitable, a natural human weakness which has popularisedin America the horrible word casket in this sense.
Thus is popularised in that century the art of prose; the uses made of it are not unprecedented, but they are far more frequent.
The theory of "Dominium," adopted and popularised by Wyclif, is an entirely feudal one.
It was adopted and popularised by Jeremy Bentham, and might have been further developed but for the introduction of transportation, which promised the well-conducted convict the prospect of a new life in a new country.
Another diversion is the Cobra Dance popularised in America by Miss Ruth St. Denis--assisted by numerous imitators.
La Sylphide (not the composition recently popularised by the Russians) was the part with which she was most unified in the minds of the public.
After dropping nearly into disuse it was revived and popularised by Marie Antoinette, for whose rendering of it Gluck composed music.
It did not make Christianity the state religion, as is generally asserted, but only legalised it, and popularised it.
Jerome and Rufinus were conspicuous examples of those devotees who by precept and practice soon popularised monasticism throughout Italy.
The doctrine that history is under the irresistible control of law was also popularised by an American physiologist, J.
I agree: Velasquez for instance; and consider the treatment of the velvet draperies in Collier's Pomps and Vanities so widely popularised by its reproduction in the Telephone Directory.
He popularised thin legs, and so many women have them.
Carvilius merely popularised the use of this letter, and perhaps gave it its place in the alphabet as seventh letter.
It was popularised by Pindar, "the Homer of the Pythagorean school.
This theory of life and death, coming down from Pythagoras, and popularised by Platonism, with some Stoic elements, had gained immense vogue among educated men of the last period of the Republic.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "popularised" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.