It really ought to be grown on a large scale and popularized as a package cereal.
Native melodies have also been adapted and popularized for band and orchestra by native musicians, of whom the best known are Dennison Wheelock and his brother James Wheelock, Oneidas and graduates of Carlisle.
As an English financier this is the Rothschild who popularized foreign stocks and loans in this country by causing the interest and dividends to be paid in London, instead of, as heretofore, abroad.
The early days of Ritualism popularized the copying of the borders of the old painted missals and prettily occupied many drawing rooms.
As has been already seen, in the theory and practice of the culture nowpopularized in England, there is a growing tendency on the part of science and art to trench upon the ground formerly occupied by literature.
A second meaning given to the word evolution is that which Spencer popularized in his First Principles.
The belief in universal evolution which Spencer popularized has also come to be generally accepted by scientific and philosophical thinkers.
It was believed by his associates, and by Clemens himself, that his known connection with the paper would give it prestige and circulation, as Nasby's connection had popularized the Toledo Blade.
Nasby, who had popularized the Toledo Blade, kept steadily to one line.
Popularized expositions from the pens of experts whose prominent official status would recommend them to the reader would restrain many healthy spirits from affiliating themselves with degenerate tendencies.
He sifted the results of the laborious researches of scholars, popularized them, and made them accessible to all educated circles.
In fact, he merely popularized Jewish subjects, and rendered them accessible to educated Christians.
The new world-religion, Christianity, had already arisen in secret by a mixture of combined oriental religions, Jewish theology and popularized Greek philosophy and particularly Stoic philosophy.
But the "Vestiges of Creation," published in 1844, had already popularized the resuscitated theories of Lamarck.
The Buddha preached a creed without reference to a supreme deity and the great Emperor Asoka, the friend of man and beast, popularized this creed throughout India.
The doctrine must therefore have been popularized after the composition of the Upanishad.
Rousseau, in his treatise on the subject,[223] popularized Saint-Pierre.
The great Revolution which popularized the institutions of France did not popularize the Post-Office.
It was he who popularized "Dollarica" as a German nickname for "God's country.
Their experience was not unlike that of numberless men of the last generation who first escaped from a puerile cosmology by way of popularized versions of Darwinism which the experts condemned as unscientific.
The sombre visage of the Emperor, the severity of the landscape, the prevailing tone of sadness, admirably rendered, explain the wide favour enjoyed by this celebrated work, further popularized in engravings.
This most decorative of all types appears to have been popularized in England by the cavaliers who had been in exile with Charles II.
On his retirement he settled near Waltham Abbey, and wrote several nautical novels on the lines popularized by Marryat, that had considerable success.
About this time the method of block-printing was popularized and there began a steady output of comprehensive histories, collected works, encyclopædias and biographies which excelled anything then published in Europe.
He popularized the doctrine of the Pai-tao or White Way, that is, the narrow bridge leading to Paradise across which Amitâbha will guide the souls of the faithful.
Chaillu's account (1861) of his journeys in the Gabun region popularized the knowledge of the existence of the gorilla.
Certain portions of this opera have, however, been popularized in the concert-room.
This is especially pronounced in our own times because popularized biological and medical knowledge makes it possible for a tremendous class of the most successful and enlightened to avoid reproduction without foregoing sex activity.
The voluntary or accidental error is nothing; but the conception of Roman Imperialism which it popularized is worth considering.
The bizarre genius of Nietzsche, whose whole position is implicit in Goethe's Divan, popularized it in Germany.
Shell-money was first popularized on Long Island by the Dutch, who, as we are informed, imported cowries and aggry beads from the East to sell them to the Guinea-merchants.
It has popularized education and developed a new social consciousness and new efficiency in rural institutions, amounting often to a total redirection of the community life.
Only recently has the garden movement developed in America, beginning in Roxbury, Boston, in 1891; but every European nation but England popularized it long ago.
For a generation college debates, in class, club and fraternity, have popularized all phases of the city problem, the very difficulties of which have challenged many a country-bred boy to throw in his life where the maelstrom was the swiftest.
The recent years of high prices and exorbitant cost of city living have popularized this slogan, the assumption being that if there were only more farmers, then food prices would be lower.
Jefferson hadpopularized the idea without carrying it ruthlessly into practice, and removals on party grounds were comparatively few under the Virginian Presidents.
With modification and embroidery, this pure fiction, used by economists to simplify their thinking, was retailed and popularized until for large sections of the population it prevailed as the economic mythology of the day.
It certainly took possession of the minds of those men who formulated and popularized the stereotypes of democracy.
Walther Rathenau, a German of Jewish descent, whose ideas have just been popularized by a Frenchman, M.
Virilism is the name by which the French in particular have popularized the knowledge of the condition.
Gall, the physiologist who popularized ideas concerning the meaning of the protuberances and depressions of the head in relation to faculty and character, early in the nineteenth century, was the first to prove this.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "popularized" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.