例句 |
inculcateverb to cause (as a person) to become filled or saturated with a certain quality or principlededicated teachers inculcating young minds with a love of learning endue(or indue), imbue, infuse, ingrain(also engrain), inoculate, invest, steep, suffuse animate, charge, enliven, invigorate, leavenimplant, instill, plantimpregnate, permeate, pervade, saturatedeluge, drown, fill, flood, inundate, overwhelm, submerge deprive, divest, stripclear, emptyeliminate, remove, take (away) to set permanently in the consciousness or mind-seta malcontent who inculcated in his offspring an abiding distrust of all civil authority breed, enroot, implant, infix, inseminate, instill, plant, sow drive, hammer, poundembed(also imbed), entrench(also intrench), fix, lodge, rootimbue, infuse, ingrain(also engrain), inoculate, invest, steep, suffuse implant, inculcate, instill, inseminate, infix mean to introduce into the mind.implant implies teaching that makes for permanence of what is taught.implanted a love of reading in her students inculcate implies persistent or repeated efforts to impress on the mind.tried to inculcate in him high moral standards instill stresses gradual, gentle imparting of knowledge over a long period of time.instill traditional values in your children inseminate applies to a sowing of ideas in many minds so that they spread through a class or nation.inseminated an unquestioning faith in technology infix stresses firmly inculcating a habit of thought.infixed a chronic cynicism in 1539 |