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Typified

Typified is the past participle of the verb typify, meaning to serve as a typical example of a group, category, or quality, or to characterize something by illustrating its essential features. As a verb form, typified can indicate that an instance has been shown to represent a broader class. As an adjective, typified describes something that embodies the characteristics of a type or category, often in a way considered representative or conventional.

In usage, typified appears in academic and analytic writing to discuss categories, models, or prototypes. For

Etymologywise, typified derives from the noun type, which comes from Latin typus and Greek typos, with the

See also: typify, type, stereotype.

example,
a
study
might
describe
a
behavior
as
typified
of
a
particular
demographic,
or
an
explanation
may
present
a
typified
case
to
illustrate
a
broader
principle.
The
term
emphasizes
typicality
rather
than
uniqueness,
and
it
can
carry
a
neutral
or
descriptive
tone,
though
some
readers
may
view
it
as
simplifying
complex
variation
into
a
single
example.
suffix
-fy
forming
the
verb.
This
lineage
reflects
the
sense
of
forming
or
representing
a
model
or
exemplar.
Related
terms
include
typify
(to
illustrate
or
characterize),
type
(a
category
or
exemplar),
and
stereotype
(a
fixed,
generalized
image
of
a
group),
though
typified
emphasizes
the
act
of
showing
a
representative
instance
rather
than
broad
generalization.