Conventionalized in a sentence as an adjective

There are generally official conventionalized versions of Western names. The Western name space isn't all that large.

圣 sheng is a fully conventionalized loan-translation of the Christian word "saint". 文森特 wen-sen-te is a sound transcription of Vincent.

To a certain degree this is conventionalized. I'd believe that modern Irish pronunciation is based more on what you hear from other Irish people than on a difficulty with thorn.

Dialect" is a conventionalized translation of the existing term 方言, not the other way around.

I totally believe the work you've done here is significantly more polished and "conventionalized", that is awesome and congrats! Ember's tools are really slick.

Different languages handle mass and count nouns different, just as Japanese where nouns have no inflection for number and you use conventionalized counter words to indicate quantity." This is eight milk".

But nobody's talking about interviews that ask for conventionalized CS material. The point is that the interview questions are more difficult.

And of course, once a name is conventionalized, you'd want to use that rather than innovating a new version. [1] Of course it's possible in general that while my foreign ears think a different Chinese syllable would better match the foreign one, the Chinese disagree and really believe they are using the closest available match.

I'm sure the current meaning of "I could care less" is quite thoroughly conventionalized: it's part of everyday speech, and many people do not notice any non-literal effects such as irony -- as evidenced by the prescriptionist videos which feel the need to explain to people the "true" meaning of the expression. Irony may have had a role in the etymology of the expression.

I think this is ridiculous; if the texts were significant, they would have attributed authors, or conventionalized authors, because of their frequent use in society -- just as, in your example, the Gospel of Mark is attributed to an entity named "Mark" for no particular reason.

Conventionalized definitions

adjective

using artistic forms and conventions to create effects; not natural or spontaneous; "a stylized mode of theater production"

See also: conventionalised stylized stylised