English

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From temple +‎ -ize.

Verb

edit

templize (third-person singular simple present templizes, present participle templizing, simple past and past participle templized)

  1. To make more temple-like.
    • 1985, Jane Webb Smith, Marianne Doezema, Georgia's Legacy: History Charted Through the Arts, page 185:
      Vernacular structures were often “templized” by adding a portico of the correct classical proportions, which were described in detail in architectural copy books.
    • 2009, Jonathan Klawans, Purity, Sacrifice, and the Temple, page 201:
      As such, the maintenance of ritual purity beyond the temple is evidence of the effort to templize other aspects of religious life. Moreover, what is templized or sacrificialized here are those aspects of daily life—particularly prayer and eating—that werer already conceptually related to temple worship.
    • 2015, Alcuin Reid, T&T Clark Companion to Liturgy, page 31:
      We thus return to where we began, to the Temple and its service; and to those pious Jews who, in the last centuries of the Temple's existence, sought to “templize” their lives by adopting a mode of life bound by rules of moral and ritual purity;religious meals described in sacrificial terms; and brought together into societies characterized by hierarchical order.
    • 2016, Steven Fine, This Holy Place, page 49:
      The question then remains, why would the synagogue lampstand be explicitly “templized” as a memorah, while the Torah chest, and other synagogue appurtenances were not so explicitly templized?