1. romanticised - Adjective
2. romanticised - Verb
romanticised (comparative more romanticised, superlative most romanticised)
Non-Oxford British English standard spelling of romanticized.
romanticised
simple past and past participle of romanticise
Syd's story is a sad story romanticised by people who don't know anything about it. They've made it fashionable but it's just not that way. David Gilmour
Over the years Woodstock got glorified and romanticised and became the event that symbolised Utopia. It's the last page of our collective memory of the age of innocence. Then things turned ugly and would never be the same again. Ang Lee
I've always liked the idea of being a father. And I've always romanticised it, because I lost my father when I was young. In a way, all of the complications that come with my career are about that. Chiwetel Ejiofor
The romanticised life, where all the great poetry and music and art of the world comes from, is great but it requires a lot of self-indulgence. Laura Marling
I wanted to dismantle the bollocks that there's a military structure to a gang, with a leader, second leader, the good looking one, first babe, second babe. It's far more arbitrary than that and their values shouldn't be romanticised. They aren't something you want to sign up to. Peter Mullan
A disturbing portrait of a disintegrating mind, The Butcher Boy gave rise to the phrase “bog gothic” and revealed the sordid realities that often lurked behind romanticised depictions of rural Ireland. Source: Internet