Word family noun style styling stylishness stylist stylistics stylization adjective stylish stylistic stylized verb style adverb stylishly stylistically
From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishstylizedsty‧lized (also stylised British English) /ˈstaɪlaɪzd/ AWL adjective AVdrawn, written, or performed in an artificial style that does not look natural or real, but that is still pleasant to look at a stylized picture of the sun —stylization /ˌstaɪlaɪˈzeɪʃən $ -lə-/ noun [uncountable]Examples from the Corpus
stylized• Hunting also provides the men with a public stage for the stylized display of virility.• There are two alternative ways of reacting to the stylized facts outlined above.• Intellectual fado is a more stylized form and is sung in the salons and by the students of Lisbon and Coimbra Universities.• John Hunt developed a more stylized form of briefing.• Yet it is also possible to see the form as a stylized if rather primitive representation of the female deity.• Standardized fascias and fronts, company colours, house lettering and stylized logos are in with a vengeance.• Waterfowl and stylized papyrus flowers recur, as do simplified outlines of chariots.• Metaphor is the dominant structuring mechanism of the novels, stylized transcription of consciousness their fictional mode.• Lisa performed a stylized version of the classic song "Silent Night."