inculcate 的定义
in·cul·cat·ed, in·cul·cat·ing.
- to implant by repeated statement or admonition; teach persistently and earnestly: to inculcate virtue in the young.
- to cause or influence to accept an idea or feeling: Socrates inculcated his pupils with the love of truth.
inculcate 近义词
implant, infuse information
更多inculcate例句
- It’s really about inculcating fashion as a work of art and concept related to civilization that’s not all that different from Arms and Armor.
- That mindset is inculcated early in the training of technologists.
- He would send his first child, Charles, there to be inculcated in its almost monastic philosophies—and the year-round cold showers and cult of derring-do, a kind of Shaolin Temple of the West.
- This will inculcate a sense of trust in them, and they’ll love to explore your offerings.
- Since 1980, American child-rearing has sought to inculcate self-esteem in the young.
- Larson does not explain that the Vice-Chancellor was spared in order to inculcate uncertainty.
- Enjoining therefore the duty of Covenanting, they inculcate that as an imitation of Him—swearing by himself.
- If they inculcate virtue, it is that theological virtue whose inutility we have sufficiently shown.
- There are, however, a few passages which inculcate upon men the propriety of a command over their temper.
- Not until the renaissance did critics define poetry as an art of imitation endeavoring to inculcate morality.
- We have seen that these words inculcate the exercise of Covenanting.