internalized in English

verb
1
make (attitudes or behavior) part of one's nature by learning or unconscious assimilation.
Of course many of us have internalized toxic attitudes such as racism and homophobia, Gage writes.
2
incorporate (costs) as part of a pricing structure, especially social costs resulting from the manufacture and use of a product.
You could say we should internalize those costs in prices, so that it affects people's behaviour.
verb
    interiorize

Use "internalized" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "internalized" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "internalized", or refer to the context using the word "internalized" in the English Dictionary.

1. Colorism reflects internalized racism…

2. Over time she internalized her parents' attitudes.

3. Such malicious Castigation, which is internalized by the abused

4. Racial Caucusing is one strategy to confront the effects of internalized racial oppression and internalized racial superiority in the organization

5. Sadly, internalized Biphobia and bi erasure are very real

6. These are invisibility, lack of community, and internalized Biphobia.

7. All these little anecdotes are tied together by one theme: internalized Biphobia

8. In this sense, the ideology allows for the possibility of an implicit, internalized dialectic.

9. Its isotope # emitted radioactive alpha rays, and its concentration that was # times more readily internalized

10. In other words, there may exist, at an implicit level, an internalized dialectic between criticism and justification.

11. This source is internalized in the sense that dependence on it for guidance in life is implanted early.

12. 21 In this sense, the ideology allows for the possibility of an implicit, internalized dialectic.

13. When internalized by older adults themselves, Ageist views can lead to poorer mental and physical health

14. Essentially, it is the external and subsequently internalized Biphobia that helps bring hurtful stereotypes and expectations to fruition

15. Its isotope U-235 emitted radioactive alpha rays, and its concentration that was 100,000 times more readily internalized.

16. Having internalized, or appropriated, what is culturally available, men can then externalize and construct different sorts of meaning.

17. Students will learn about the different ways in which Ableism takes place: on interpersonal, institutional and internalized levels.

18. 22 In other words, there may exist, at an implicit level, an internalized dialectic between criticism and justification.

19. Recognizing the internalized self-image of the counsellee is an important perceptual skill in arriving at a working hypothesis.

20. The rhetorical approach links the processes of thinking to those of argumentation, for it suggests that deliberative thought is internalized argumentation.

21. 22 Indeed, they have been embarrassed by them, having so internalized the epistemological criteria of positivism, empiricism and pragmatism.

22. In fact, “Closure” as an end goal in grief is such a common misconception that many people have thoroughly internalized it

23. Buddhists look at the ways in which this sociocultural conditioning is internalized and becomes part of the afflictive energies generated by self-grasping

24. This year, we challenge everyone to identify and question these internalized ageist attitudes, and to understand the serious impact that these attitudes have.

25. When phage in vivo circulated at enough long period of time, some phage particles could extravasate in some organs or tissues and internalized there.

26. Yolk cells internalized o Blastopore becomes circular and plugged with yolk-filled cells o Now gastrula embryo has 3 germ layers, an archenteron, and a Blastopore LCI – it was a

27. Consequently, Burundians, especially from the Hutu and Tutsi groups internalized this representation of Burundi society to the extent of using it as a source of resentment and conflict

28. Affect theory is a theory that seeks to organize Affects, sometimes used interchangeably with emotions or subjectively experienced feelings, into discrete categories and to typify their physiological, social, interpersonal, and internalized manifestations

29. Background: Experiencing Adversities during upbringing has short-term and long-term effects on mental health.This study aims to explore how social Adversities in adolescence predict trajectories of internalized mental health symptoms (IMHS), from …

30. It doesn’t matter if you’re like me, someone who has fully embraced the label, or someone on the opposite of the spectrum, still in denial about their bisexuality, we all struggle with internalized Biphobia to some degree.

31. In addition, in the absence of internalized practices for monitoring and evaluation, there was no evidence-based feedback mechanism or knowledge management system to allow UNDP to learn from experience and improve its performance

32. It shows that when we know a language, we haven't just memorized a very long list of sentences, but rather have internalized a grammar or algorithm or recipe for combining elements into brand new assemblies.

33. Such malicious Castigation, which is internalized by the abused person as true, crushes the spirit of the recipient, and they retreat from the life they were living to follow the script of their destruction -- becoming a self-imposed prophecy.

34. Feelings of superiority to people lower on the class spectrum than oneself, a sense of entitlement, rationalizations of Classist policies and institutions on the part of middle class and people on the upper end of the class spectrum are examples of internalized domination

35. Now, perhaps even more than it was first released, Morrison’s first novel, The Bluest Eye, provides a pathway for reflecting on (and resisting) the impact of internalized racist ideas on the personal self-identifications of Black children, particularly Black girls.

36. Microglial/macrophage activation was specifically associated with these restricted microdomains, as evidenced by rapid microglial process retraction, increased Ameboid morphology, and escape of blood-borne Q-dot tracers that were internalized in microglial/macrophage cell bodies and phagosome-like compartments.

37. When Othello says, falsely believing in Desdemona's unfaithfulness, "My name, that was as fresh / As Dian's visage, is now Begrimed and black / As mine own face" (3.3.391-93), blackness is not simply considered as a corporeal feature, but an internalized subjectivity open to contamination

38. For the artist it is a kind of internal "projection screen" on which he may examine, as well as combine, divide, rearrange, and judge images originally obtained through sense perception.(28) It allows him, along with the judgment of the intelletto, to create a proper style from the many examples he has Copied and internalized.(29) In Cennini's

39. This instrument of soft control is designed to help change certain structures or behavioural patterns of a given social actor, for example a national state collective, and, moreover, in an asymmetric transnational process of interaction. The EU developed this new instrument in the course of its eastward enlargement; it differs significantly from analogous attempts by the US in the Greater Middle East, functioning through a system of positive incentives and rewards: the more deeply the Copenhagen Criteria are internalized, the more likely it will be that the reform process runs of its own accord.