objectify Meaning & Definition

  • En [ əbˈdʒek.tɪ.faɪ]
  • Us [ əbˈdʒek.tɪ.faɪ]

Meaning of objectify In English

More Definitions of objectify

Examples of objectify

  • Higher-orderness then consists of the ability to objectify such functions and, thereby, to embed them in data or pass them as arguments to other functions.

  • I have been looking for dimensions by which the value of objects is objectified and which may be grasped archaeologically.

  • Statistical measurement - the conversion of economic phenomena into numbers - objectified the crisis and surrounded it with the aura of ' scientific ' objectivity.

  • The past, childhood and tradition were not elsewhere, but immediately present, not objectified but lived.

  • There is always the risk, however much the notion of choice is objectified, that an element of subjectivity remains.

  • This was a journey in which the matter itself was concrete time, fixed by the machine which objectified the material delivered to the sensory experience.

  • This power is objectified and impersonal, and its gender bias has hitherto been invisible.

  • The concept of value has been approached here as a judgement about goods which is objectified by desirability for them and accessibility to them.

More Examples of objectify

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