Dictionary
popularization
noun
The act of making something popular to the general public.
Exact(8)
September 1, 1946 Oshogbo, Nigeria King Sunny Ade, original name Sunday Adeniyi (born Sept. 1, 1946, Oshogbo, Nigeria), Nigerian popular musician in the vanguard of the development and international popularization of juju music a fusion of traditional Yoruba vocal forms and percussion with Western rock and roll.
His book was the principal source for a best-selling popularization, Is Paris Burning? (1965), by Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre.
After 1884 they worked for the popularization of Naturalism through other journals that they edited (i.e., Berliner Monatshefte, Kritisches Jahrbuch, and Die Freie Bühne), in which they published essays on Naturalistic aesthetics.
Clark and Andreessen planned to further this popularization process and to capitalize on it by marketing a commercial-quality Web browser, Web-server software, development tools, and related services.
The third, largely a Roman phenomenon, was characterized by the popularization of mosaic and the application of the medium to new functions.
They led the way in defining green design, and they contributed significantly to the popularization of environmental principles.
Melodrama arose from two factors: the popularization of Romanticism and the Gothic; and the evasion of the restrictive licensing laws of England and France.
In addition, the popularization of the term carbon offset in the first decade of the 21st century accompanied growing concern about CO2 as an atmospheric pollutant.
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