English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From antique +‎ -ize.

Verb edit

antiquize (third-person singular simple present antiquizes, present participle antiquizing, simple past and past participle antiquized)

  1. To give the appearance of being an antique.
    • 1835, “XCIII. Conversation on Dramatic Poetry”, in The Cabinet; a Series of Essays, Moral and Literary, volume II, Edinburgh: Printed for Bell & Bradfute;  [], page 351:
      But in his comedy (particularly that inimitable creation of Falstaffe), there is a constant flow of variety and invention;—and,—what is singular,—the language is more easy, and less tinged with the marks of antiquity, than that of his tragic dialogue. This is an exception from the common rule; for the indirect evanescent allusions, and idiomatic phraseology of comic writing are usually found to antiquize, (if I may be allowed a new coinage), before the more general ideas, and forms of expression, which occur in solemn composition.
    • 1986, Jonathan Gash, The Tartan Ringers, C&R Crime, published 2014, →ISBN:
      [] I found myself frowning at the painting. Two figures were seated on the lawn, quite like statues. Modern dress, so there was no intent to antiquize.
    • 2008, Metamorphosed Margins: The Case for a Visual Rhetoric of the Renaissance Grottesche Under the Influence of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Georg Olms Verlag, translation of original by Viktor Kommerell, →ISBN, page 32:
      In Mantova’s Chiesa Sant’Andrea the distinction between the decorative and the figurative is more obvious. There is no overlap, no intermingling between the large paintings, the cupola figurative extravaganza and the ornamental decorations neatly surrounding or supporting them. Whilst the grottesca candelaber pilaster “antiquize”, the figurative scenes narrate Christian stories.

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