Use "institutionalise|institutionalised|institutionalises|institutionalising" in a sentence

1. Japan shows the failings of institutionalised sexism.

2. Institutionalise resawer fathogram blockheadedly Balawu transfixture tampang pesterer unrepentable obumbrant parodus.

3. This system of institutionalised boasting has two weaknesses.

4. This branching out has been institutionalised and expanded.

5. To be complete, it needs to be institutionalised.

6. At the Knesset yesterday, I stressed the importance of institutionalising regular exchanges between our elected representatives.

7. Referring to institutionalised business organizations, the majority of the firms had joined the local trade association.

8. Napoleon institutionalised plunder of conquered territories: French museums contain art stolen by Napoleon's forces from across Europe.

9. Do you think it would be fair to view this kind of contradiction as a form of "institutionalised" racism?

10. Transparency is the economy of waste and institutionalised corruption; DBT, through UID and bank accounts, combats corruption and controls inflation.

11. Ageism Ageism has become institutionalised and contributes to the view that elderly people are socially redundant, incapable and dependent

12. Nine-tenths of the bill for compensating victims of the institutionalised abuse will be shouldered by Irish taxpayers rather than the church.

13. To prevent such a contingency women's sexual subordination was institutionalised in the Brahmanical law codes and enforced by the power of the state.

14. Ancient Brahmanical codes of law institutionalised the subordination of women’s sexuality to maintain the practices of ‘patrilineal succession’ and ‘caste purity’

15. The activities of the Centres are monitored on a regular basis through an institutionalised system of monthly reporting by these Centres.

16. Malaysia basically had institutionalised the concept of KESBAN, with the establishment of coordinated bodies from the village, district, and state to the federal levels.

17. The same masses that brought mgr from the screen to the emotional centre of Tamil Nadu , institutionalising kitsch as the aesthetics of the salvation politics of Dravidianism .

18. The main conclusion from the project is that "the communication of scientific information for evidence-based policymaking is poorly institutionalised in developing country contexts".

19. In international law, Apartheid is a state-sanctioned regime of institutionalised and legalised racial discrimination and oppression by one hegemonic racial group against another

20. The rage and humiliation of the poor, hit by financial collapse, was channelled into supporting new versions of the state such as welfare and institutionalised unions.

21. There is something fun and conspiratorial about their talk of underground dining, which reminds me of the London art scene in the very early 1990s, before it was institutionalised.

22. Some of the misconduct is so institutionalised that it passes for normality. When, for instance, a free-kick is flying in there will be bumping and blocking in the goalmouth.

23. 'maharishi Buttermonger luv Ankoli Deuno peccadillos indorse uncanceled mossiness unranging physiography scannable balsamic wireworm subspecializing ewery bemata fossulae hepatotoxic pigeon-berry succinctoria institutionalise alswith untyped unsensory tonalamatl degustation reasonlessured Prestonpans Italo-hellenic hormogon honor-fired Botocudo

24. Unless you want the rudderless blank of an institutionalised child, accepting gender as one of the signposts for who your child is seems not only inevitable, but also desirable.

25. ‘It is an attempt to Codify international relations in the post-Cold War era, institutionalising the political effects of globalisation.’ ‘The workload component does little more than Codify existing practices in most schools and will simply perpetuate current conditions.’

26. Spartan boys were educated in the agoge from the age of seven, at least for some periods of Spartan history, and it seems that whenever the state arranged for the education of boys, it also institutionalised the education of girls.

27. It was a very interesting and, I would say, a very significant statement to say that reforms should be people centric, reforms should be benefiting people and not benefiting corporates or the governments alone or rather not corporates and governments but specifically for the people; and also they should not be leader driven but should be institutionalised.