Popularize in a sentence as a verb

He has helped popularize the notion of "skin in the game".

Lots of startups have tried to popularize Bitcoin.

Cryptocat is helping popularize it, and that's good.

I hadn't heard about Mike Rowe until he started his program to popularize the trades.

NPR needs to popularize its information, thus ensuring that we, the casual reader, can get a grasp of what's going on.

Instead he fought to popularize global warming and has helped moved policy forward.

How about we popularize encryption, and take the choice out of the hands of corporations and governments?

Seriously, you can't just mix RGB like this; perceptual color scales like Cynthia Brewer has helped popularize are the right choice.

This justification seems especially odd to me since Rails did so much in the first place to popularize the idea that the default behavior should be the one most likely to be "right".

It later sponsored the Harmony project which was an unsuccessful effort to popularize a standardized suite of contributor agreements. When the Harmony agreements were released in 2011, Canonical began using one of the Harmony CLAs.

To extend my metaphor for a moment, it's as if the engineers of 1963 had decided to popularize open source software by inventing and promoting Github, instead of inventing the personal computer and Ethernet first.

One professor of statistics, who is a co-author of a highly regarded AP statistics textbook, has tried to popularize the phrase that "voluntary response data are worthless" to go along with the phrase "correlation does not imply causation.

Popularize definitions

verb

cater to popular taste to make popular and present to the general public; bring into general or common use; "They popularized coffee in Washington State"; "Relativity Theory was vulgarized by these authors"

See also: popularise vulgarize vulgarise generalize generalise

verb

make understandable to the general public; "Carl Sagan popularized cosmology in his books"

See also: popularise