0 past simple and past participle of stereotype
1 to have a set idea about what a particular type of person is like, especially an idea that is wrong:
Such origin stories became stereotyped, as the same ones were being told in the mid-eighteenth century.
Analysis of the subjects' speech showed fewer patronizing features towards a positively stereotyped older person, but even then, age-related adaptations were made to the speech.
It refers to a supposed subculture stereotyped as uneducated, uncultured and prone to antisocial or immoral behavior.
In this respect, they are quite different from communication systems based on a limited repertoire of stereotyped messages.
Few people were still able to whistle it, and their repertoire was limited to a small number of stereotyped formulas.
Thus, neither the stereotyped delta rhythm nor spindles require local inhibitory interneurons, which are rather engaged in sculpturing information processing during adaptive behavioral states.
The use of a stereotyped sentence prevented variation in the form of sentence construction beyond that specified by the task instructions.
In the latter contexts the subject will offer only stereotyped, concrete, low level descriptions.