indoctrinate / ɪnˈdɒk trəˌneɪt /

🎓大学词汇灌输灌输信息灌输知识灌输式教育

indoctrinate 的定义

v. 有主动词 verb

in·doc·tri·nat·ed, in·doc·tri·nat·ing.

  1. to instruct in a doctrine, principle, ideology, etc., especially to imbue with a specific partisan or biased belief or point of view.
  2. to teach or inculcate.
  3. to imbue with learning.

indoctrinate 近义词

v. 动词 verb

brainwash

更多indoctrinate例句

  1. Conservatives have insisted that there is no systemic racism and that schools are trying to indoctrinate students by teaching CRT — even though there is no evidence that most schools do.
  2. One lawmaker went so far as to call the schools “socialism factories,” and DeSantis accused schools of “indoctrinating” students.
  3. Publishers like America’s Test Kitchen, The New York Times, The Week and Time are finding that kids’ content verticals, magazines, books and programming are ways to indoctrinate younger readers and grow their audience bases.
  4. The good news is that the MAGA crowd is failing spectacularly to indoctrinate fellow Americans.
  5. They want to indoctrinate impressionable young minds by placing these gay characters on pedestals in a positive light.
  6. He then proceeded to rant about “liberal college professors” trying to “indoctrinate” students.
  7. Santorum also complains about “some liberal college professor … trying to indoctrinate” students.
  8. I also tried through my own newspaper to indoctrinate the people, but my mind grew more and more embarrassed.
  9. Better to save one sinner from an obvious vice that is destroying him, than to indoctrinate ten thousand saints.
  10. It is not at all the idea to carry over one of our professors each year and indoctrinate him with the true culture at its source.
  11. Located in Bucharest, both of these institutions are designed to train and indoctrinate key bureaucratic personnel.
  12. She begged him to indoctrinate his successor, Mr. Edward Stanhope.