English edit

Etymology edit

differential +‎ -ize

Verb edit

differentialize (third-person singular simple present differentializes, present participle differentializing, simple past and past participle differentialized)

  1. (rare) Synonym of differentiate
    • 1836, Sarah Austin, Goethe and His Contemporaries:
      By taking a false analogy—that of a magnetic needle—he had distorted light into two poles, and thus (no less than had formerly been done) had sought to explain colours by differentializing the Unchangeable and Untouchable.
    • 1876, J[oseph] H[enry] Shorthouse, “Diseases and Disorders of the Breathing Apparatus”, in The Common Sense of Medicine, 3rd edition, London: A. H. Baily & Co., page 7:
      Manifold as are the disorders and diseases of the organs which are more or less concerned in enabling mankind to draw the “breath of life,” it is no intention of mine to differentialize them, and to apportion to each their relative importance.

Synonyms edit