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internalise

[ UK /ɪntˈɜːnəlˌa‍ɪz/ ]
VERB
  1. incorporate within oneself; make subjective or personal
    internalize a belief

How To Use internalise In A Sentence

  • But this idea does point in the right general direction: toward a kind of inner conflict, toward what I have called a kind of "brokenness" in the human psyche, and in particular toward a failure of integration within the person of the creature's feelings and needs and impulses on the one hand, and the moral injunctions internalized from the socializing culture on the other. A Piece (from Huffington Post) on the Right's Manifest Hypocrisy Problem
  • James Ponsoldt: This notion is at the core of Killer of Sheep: what it means to be an adult, and how children learn and internalize grown-up behavior and responsibilities through lectures, through tears, but mostly by silently observing, peeking around corners, usually unbeknownst to their parents. GreenCine Daily: Filmmaker. Spring 07.
  • It is a peculiar notion of masculinity that is naturalised and internalised in everyday practices and relationships by both men and women.
  • This source is internalized in the sense that dependence on it for guidance in life is implanted early.
  • The emission charge is an effective method to internalize the externalized problem of environment.
  • Depression is seen by many as something shameful or embarrassing, and it's very easy to internalize that attitude.
  • These divisions often use their own capital to "internalize," or trade against, customer order flow. Sen. Ted Kaufman: We Need a Banking System That is "Too Safe to Fail"
  • Daily life is an ongoing process of internalized discipline: parents teach their children to act as though the child next to them but in a different city isn't there; adults become hyperconscious of how long they look in a particular direction, or in what direction they step; and eventually, residents of each city come to embody their citizenship in particular ways of movement. The Little Professor:
  • Psychologist Christof van Nimwegen is interested in effective user interfaces for computer systems, and distinguishes between systems that require users to internalise the knowledge needed to carry out a task and those that externalise it in the form of wizards, prompts, menus and the other elements we associate with modern computers. Z is for ZPD « An A-Z of ELT
  • And it is indeed true that the mechanism which supported the 'Estado de India' nourished a very unique place, one which internalised the life-affirming concept behind a word redolent of the very essence of Behind the News: Voices from Goa's Press
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