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contemporize
[ kuhn-tem-puh-rahyz ]
verb (used with object)
- to place in or regard as belonging to the same age or time.
- to give a modern or contemporary character or setting to; update:
The new production of Romeo and Juliet contemporizes it as the love of two modern teenagers in a Chicago high school.
verb (used without object)
- to be contemporary.
contemporize
/ kənˈtɛmpəˌraɪz /
verb
- to be or make contemporary; synchronize
Word History and Origins
Origin of contemporize1
Example Sentences
Next on her agenda, she plans to contemporize works of Memphis-based photographer Ernest Withers for an upcoming show and to explore interactive and participatory art in her practice.
How can you contemporize a work whose very conceit — its whole plot, its central perspective — will land like a well-meaning but ignorant cousin’s comment in a conscientious cultural conversation?
“Howard has a rich legacy. … My responsibility is to contemporize that and to bring faculty to the university who are in the contemporary space, speaking to present-day issues.”
Don’t get me wrong: The changes contemporize the tale and varnish it with another layer of realism.
I looked at a lot of images of women from the Black Panther movement with their Afros and fists raised and then contemporized the hairstyle to say we’re still fighting the same battle.
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