How to Use gentrified in a Sentence

gentrified

adjective
  • In Chicago, a lot of thrift shops are very gentrified now, and used clothes are often more expensive than new clothes.
    Jacqueline Delgadillo, refinery29.com, 20 Jan. 2023
  • Today, the city is larger and more gentrified, with far less violent crime and twice as few homicides.
    Michael Brice-Saddler, Washington Post, 21 Jan. 2023
  • Mel, the mother of two daughters, tries to reclaim her place in a gentrified neighborhood while her kids learn firsthand how to balance their own lives.
    San Diego Union-Tribune, 27 Mar. 2022
  • Not far from the Elangeni Gardens, trendy, gentrified markets speak to a vibrant city that many young people find attractive.
    Lynsey Chutel, New York Times, 17 May 2023
  • His uncle, Mike Gormley, opened the bar in 1983, long before the neighborhood had become the gentrified domain of young families.
    Josh Noel, chicagotribune.com, 4 Aug. 2020
  • The film tells the story of a young black man’s efforts to reclaim his childhood home, now an expensive Victorian house in a gentrified neighborhood of San Francisco.
    Gege Reed, The Courier-Journal, 31 Jan. 2022
  • In a way, the row encapsulates this extremely gentrified part of town, which has changed dramatically since McFadyen arrived in 1978.
    Jacopo Prisco, CNN, 5 Feb. 2022
  • As Los Feliz has mutated through the years, from a scruffy and diverse neighborhood into its more sleek and gentrified successor, one of its few reassuring constants is the bookstore around the corner.
    Los Angeles Times, 14 Apr. 2022
  • Most recently, in response to the soulless sameness of the megaplexes, a new kind of gentrified cinema has emerged, with reserved seating, food service and artisanal cocktails delivered to your seat.
    New York Times, 16 Oct. 2020
  • With better schools and less crime, segregated districts become gentrified, leaving them more racially mixed.
    The Economist, 11 June 2020
  • All-seat stadiums replaced standing bleachers, helping to phase out soccer's hooliganistic image and replacing it with something more gentrified.
    NBC News, 16 July 2021
  • For the Latinos, the fight was to preserve community anchors including churches, as the neighborhood becomes increasingly gentrified and working-class Mexican families are being forced out by rising rents.
    Julie Bosman Todd Heisler, New York Times, 17 Dec. 2022
  • Organizers specifically chose upscale areas such as the gentrified downtown, Beverly Hills, and the beachside community of Santa Monica to bring their message home.
    Patrik Jonsson, The Christian Science Monitor, 2 June 2020
  • Sometimes, more recent Prides feel like a gentrified neighborhood losing its original ethnic or racial soul, or a former friend disappearing into a dysfunctional relationship and after time bearing little resemblance to their former self.
    Pamela Sneed, Harper's BAZAAR, 25 June 2021

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'gentrified.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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