La Chaise Dieu, Auvergne, marks the priestly terrorism, which could not fail to be vulgarised even more by the frivolous.
The theory that the Papacy represents Antichrist has so long been the solemn belief of rebels against its authority, that it has become a vulgarised article of Protestant faith.
We have now seen the worst of that society, whether crushed by the tyranny of the Caesars, or corrupted and vulgarised by sudden elevation from ignominious poverty to wealth and luxury.
What variety this simple detail, more propagated or rather better vulgarised among our romancists, would have thrown into the great romances of adventure!
The custom, of which Tallemant speaks, of presenting ladies, after the banquet, with basins of Spanish Gloves, was only vulgarised in passing from the Court to the town.
Work, I prefer to say, is vulgarised good resolutions.
Has he not first to translate himself into the grotesquely obvious, and then set forth his whole personality and cause in that vulgarised and simplified fashion?
For I've learnt a trick which I fear to reveal; it is so valuable and necessary to me that if I talked of it or vulgarised it my secret might be stolen away.
The refinement of the courtiers' circle, though somewhat vulgarised compared with that of the previous period, freely penetrated into the families of the rough soldiery.
Tolstoy, who speedily caught and vulgarised Remizov's knack of creating grotesque "provincial" characters.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "vulgarised" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.