It makes possible the great mantra, the great invitation, of Sedgwick's work, which is to "
pluralize and specify." (Barthes: "One must
pluralize, refine, continuously.") This is an activity that demands an attentiveness--a relentlessness, even--whose very rigor tips it into ardor.
Russell contends that the openness and flexibility of the current technological environment, and the efforts of the activists to diversify and
pluralize their technological inventory, lead to a more evenly contested discursive environment in which "networked publics are pushing back technologically and by sharing their points of view with mass audiences" (p.
Across eight chapters, Biddle describes the work of painters, photographers, weavers, sculptors and animators, providing a generous overview that seeks to '
pluralize and complicate any singular perspective on the now' (p.37).
If you need
pluralize an alphabet letter, numeral, or acronym, you may use an apostrophe.
Only in the 1900s did we
pluralize the term and start talking about priorities.
The shape of the singular form is CVCCVC which becomes CVCVbCVC after they
pluralize. The vowel in the infix can be {a} or {?} based on the place features of the preceding consonant.
This turn to the "local" would
pluralize knowledge and blunt globalization's hegemonic tendencies in scholarly work.
Predating the Handbook's endeavor to
pluralize and decenter modernism stylistically, chronologically, and geoculturally--which effort, in turn, is the latest in a series going back roughly to the early 2000s--said model or reading "grid" has been for more than two decades now part and parcel of postmodern studies, on the one hand, and global/new comparative studies, on the other.
For instance, it would represent a helpful tool in answering and clarifying many questions that beginner students usually have, such as knowing whether to use 'avere' or 'essere' in a compound tense, or how to change the endings of nouns to
pluralize them.
Crisostomo uses his translator's conceit in employing the English language convention of adding an "s" to
pluralize nouns for his Tagalog adaptation title.
Berger notes that modernity does not necessarily secularize us (make us less religious) but it does
pluralize us.
How might we
pluralize restrictive norms about bodies and what they can do?