ideologize

[ahy-dee-ol-uh-jahyz, id-ee-]

i·de·ol·o·gize

[ahy-dee-ol-uh-jahyz, id-ee-]
verb (used with object), i·de·ol·o·gized, i·de·ol·o·giz·ing.
1.
to explain or express ideologically: to ideologize a political opinion.
2.
to cause to comply with or yield to a particular ideology.
Also, especially British, i·de·ol·o·gise.


Origin:
1855–60; ideolog(y) + -ize
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2012.
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Ideologize has a plethora of syllables.
So is antidisestablishmentarianism. Does it mean:
opposition to the withdrawal of state support or recognition from an established church, esp. the Anglican Church in 19th-century England.
the estimation of something as valueless (encountered mainly as an example of one of the longest words in the English language).
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