British spelling of minimize; to reduce something to the smallest possible amount or degree. To make something appear less important or significant than it actually is.
From Latin 'minimus' meaning smallest, with the suffix '-ize' added in the 19th century. The British spelling retains the 's' while American English uses 'z', reflecting different standardization choices in the 18th and 19th centuries.
The British 'ise' versus American 'ize' spelling split happened because American lexicographer Noah Webster deliberately chose 'ize' endings to make American English more phonetic and distinct from British English. This wasn't just linguistic nationalism—Webster believed simpler spellings would make literacy more accessible.
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