From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishsystematizesys‧te‧ma‧tize (also systematise British English) /ˈsɪstəmətaɪz/ verb [transitive] ORDER/SEQUENCEto put facts, numbers, ideas etc into a particular order —systematization /ˌsɪstəmətaɪˈzeɪʃən $ -mətə-/ noun [uncountable]→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
systematize• The process by which one became a trader had become rigidly systematized.• It was first systematized by Gratian of Bologna in the twelfth century.• Refusing to build a system or to allow his philosophy to be systematized, he writes in aphorisms.• As orthodoxy, it must systematize its precepts and legitimate them.• The enemy is the mind's tendency to systematize, sew up experience, place a distance between itself and immediacy.• One can not criticize the urge to systematize systematically.• Do not overfeed, and systematize your feeding to save the lives of your fish.