Use "ingrained" in a sentence

1. Morals tend to be deeply ingrained.

2. Prejudice remains deeply ingrained in many organizations.

3. Such ingrained prejudices cannot be corrected easily.

4. The Associative guilt was ingrained in his soul.

5. The associative guilt was ingrained in his soul.

6. The oil had become ingrained in his skin.

7. His Southern Baptist upbringing was still too ingrained.

8. 1 The associative guilt was ingrained in his soul.

9. All mankind has some mischievousness ingrained in their being.

10. Ingrained memories still produce overwhelming feelings of worthlessness and guilt.”

11. So all the ingrained prejudice and hatred melted away before my eyes.”

12. But historically speaking, this reverence for language is deeply ingrained and persistent.

13. Williamson's experiences of the war were just as deeply ingrained.

14. Such learned behaviour is heavily ingrained in many of us.

15. From ingrained habit he paused to straighten up the bed.

16. Ingrained attitudes and habitual ways of thinking are very difficult to change.

17. The idea of doing our duty is deeply ingrained in most people.

18. She raged against their ingrained fear of life and their traditional views.

19. The belief that one should work hard is ingrained in our culture.

20. Another important reason is these people have an ingrained superiority complex in them.

21. This was the photo we took that night, forever ingrained in my heart.

22. The belief that you should own your house is deeply ingrained in British society.

23. Freedom and fun are ingrained in the culture, kitchen and guest experience at Bookers

24. It forms a part of a man's life, more deeply ingrained as he matures.

25. Though sometimes overt, racism is usually covert, but is deeply ingrained in professional and institutional practices.

26. In the world's most litigious society the refusal to admit liability is culturally ingrained.

27. So ingrained is the reflex of contention that even seemingly unobjectionable ideas provoke it.

28. Synonyms for Bedded include emBedded, fixed, implanted, rooted, lodged, entrenched, enrooted, set, planted and ingrained

29. 9 So ingrained is the reflex of contention that even seemingly unobjectionable ideas provoke it.

30. The belief that we should do our duty is deeply ingrained in most of us.

31. Lying to ourselves is more deeply ingrained than lying to others. Fyodor Dostoyevsky 

32. But their sense of an ingrained trait that will likely resurface in a stronger job market.

33. Synonyms for Connatural include innate, built-in, congenital, connate, hereditary, inborn, inbred, ingrained, inherent and inherited

34. Amelia loved poetry and had an ingrained habit of retreating into it to handle difficult situations.

35. That first post-natal subservience, bred of physical dependence, was too ingrained ever to be totally eradicated.

36. Ableism exists everywhere, and often, people don’t notice these microaggressions because they are so ingrained in our culture.

37. This is so ingrained and so influential, I shall have occasion to come back to it many times.

38. These traits are ingrained and stable dispositions to respond to certain situations in particular ways characteristic of the personality.

39. 12 synonyms for Besetting: chronic, persistent, long-standing, prevalent, habitual, ingrained, deep-seated, incurable, deep-rooted, inveterate, incorrigible

40. “Ableism” is a form of disability discrimination — but it’s so culturally ingrained that it’s often hard to combat

41. Their faults seem so deeply ingrained, from quantitative measures and bogus statistics to valueless currencies and not caring about the environment.

42. There are many synonyms of Connatural which include Congenital, Connate, Hereditary, Inborn, Inbred, Ingrained, Inherent, Inherited, Native, Natural, etc.

43. Wolfe parlays Alex’s ingrained inability to ignore ectoplasmic Accosters into some amusing cross-conversations that help lighten his protagonist’s hard inner tests

44. Wolfe parlays Alex’s ingrained inability to ignore ectoplasmic Accosters into some amusing cross-conversations that help lighten his protagonist’s hard inner tests

45. Prime Minister Modi noted that this model of collaboration was already deeply ingrained in UK investments and partnerships with India.

46. Watch Crofters Music Online Join our group on Facebook Ingrained in who we are Live music is everything to us

47. Begrimed definition: thickly covered with ingrained dirt or soot synonyms: soiled, dirty, raunchy, dingy, grubby, grungy, grimy, unclean antonyms: clean

48. Confirmed adjective long-established, seasoned, rooted, chronic, hardened, habitual, ingrained, inveterate, inured, dyed-in-the-wool I'm a Confirmed bachelor

49. Aboriginalities essay “How have settler constructions of aboriginal people affected aboriginal peoples?” The settler voice towards aboriginal peoples, has ingrained constructs i.e

50. So deeply ingrained is our instinct to search for a pattern that we refuse to accept any input as genuinely random.

51. The history of Blackface is long and complex, and deeply ingrained in our culture – in vaudeville and minstrel shows and in movies

52. Indeed it was possible that the obstacles to change in Britain were too deeply ingrained for any government to effect significant improvements.

53. Acclimatizing to heat and cold occurs in a similar fashion, with deep physiological adjustments becoming hormonally and metabolically ingrained over long stretches of time.

54. Antisocial Personality Disorder Antisocial personality disorder describes an ingrained pattern of behavior in which individuals consistently disregard and violate the rights of others around them.

55. Soldiers arriving with an ingrained Barbarised mindset, developed on the Eastern Front, shaped the immediate environment of the area of operations, and of Nazi Germany as a whole

56. Due to my ingrained Curmudgeonliness, along with an indifference to most events other than athletics, I’ve not seen a great deal of the Tokyo Olympics’ TV coverage

57. The resulting story illustrates how ingrained the concept of Crusading was in the people of that time— the chroniclers assumed that the pueri must have been Crusaders

58. Soldiers arriving with an ingrained Barbarised mindset, developed on the Eastern Front, shaped the immediate environment of the area of operations, and of Nazi Germany as a whole

59. Soldiers arriving with an ingrained Barbarised mindset, developed on the Eastern Front, shaped the immediate environment of the area of operations, and of Nazi Germany as a whole

60. Your adrenaline is elevated, and your actions are stemming from these deeply ingrained reflexes, reflexes rooted in a need to protect yourself and your side and to defeat the enemy.

61. Even though most of us recognize the fallacy of placing too great a value on appearance, our desire for physical beauty is so ingrained in us that we cannot disassociate ourselves from it.

62. The great footwear from Angulus is based upon three core values that are ingrained in every single pair of sandals, shoes, boots, and slippers, that you can buy from Angulus.

63. 30 According to the Daily Mail on February one retired couple of the UK found a weird image ingrained in the trunk of a poplar tree when they were chopping firewood.

64. Begrimed: 1 adj thickly covered with ingrained dirt or soot “a miner's Begrimed face” Synonyms: dingy , grimy , grubby , grungy , raunchy dirty , soiled , unclean soiled or likely to soil with dirt or grime

65. The story of the Conquistadors and the fall of the Aztec Empire have spanned many myths and stories which have become ingrained in Western consciousness and culture, regardless of how true they are

66. Here are all the possible meanings and translations of the word Begrimed. Princeton's WordNet (0.00 / 0 votes)Rate this definition: Begrimed, dingy, grimy, grubby, grungy, raunchy (adj) thickly covered with ingrained dirt or soot

67. The insulated nature of Amish communities has always piqued our interest due to their shunning of modern conveniences, their closed communities and their way of living and thinking that seems so far removed from the modern-day stresses so ingrained in our daily …

68. Constituted: 1 adj brought about or set up or accepted; especially long established “distrust the Constituted authority” Synonyms: established deep-rooted , deep-seated , implanted , ingrained , planted (used especially of ideas or principles) deeply rooted; firmly fixed or held entrenched established firmly and securely grooved , well-grooved

69. Bluffness actress accumulated dirt, cover with grime, layer of dirt or other filth covering or ingrained in a surface, make dirty, soil, make filthy majoration drop-down form field canned உலோகப் போலி Melius frangi quam flecti kongouseki ربح استثنائي prototype hodden to heat, to scorch oriental gedeeltelijk

70. ‘This, he explains, would Analyse our make-do-and-mend culture, our suspicion of the bravely new, our ingrained preference for the status quo.’ ‘It is important for us to keep our options open and to Analyse the options in detail to see which is the best for York City.’

71. ‘I've Analysed the situation and explained it to my readers.’ ‘Its value depends on the patterns which it creates and the way in which it is Analysed and interpreted.’ ‘This, he explains, would analyse our make-do-and-mend culture, our suspicion of the bravely new, our ingrained preference for the status quo.’

72. The ugal Principles Underlying Irregular Belligerencies: Often Ignored in the Reporting on Iraq The Nature of the Current Violence As discussed below in detail, the media's use of the now firmly ingrained term, "in­ surgents," or "insurgency," is both factually and legally incorrect and reflects the media's misunderstanding of the conflict.

73. Beholden to a base that, like a capricious Autocrat, will turn against them at the slightest provocation.: However, the concept of absolutism was so ingrained in Russia that the Russian Constitution of 1906 still described the Tsar as an Autocrat.: Gilbert is a perfect Autocrat, insisting that his words should be delivered, even to an inflection of the voice, as he dictates.

74. That which we call A rose / By any other name would smell as sweet…” In fact, the line has become so ingrained in public consciousness, that a common misquotation reads “A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.” And then there’s always 20th century poet Gertrude Stein’s contribution – “Rose is A rose is A rose is A rose.”