(Used especially of ideas or principles) deeply rooted; firmly fixed or held.
1 It was ingrained in his political instincts to avoid answering this question.
2 Lawmakers are also concerned that cultural problems at the bank are ingrained .
3 It is a market sustained by severe poverty and ingrained gender inequality.
4 Settus trembled with suppressed violence but years of ingrained discipline halted him.
5 Perhaps more pertinent is the ingrained Spanish fear of all things Italian.
6 All movements were well practiced, ingrained in muscle memory, yet slightly different.
7 How deeply ingrained was the hunter and the competitor in every child.
8 Since 1918, home ownership grew, becoming deeply ingrained in the British psyche.
9 We are trying to fight it. Soccer remains ingrained in Haitian culture.
10 The more deeply the habit becomes ingrained the more automatic it becomes.
11 That the instinct to violence is so ingrained it can't be overcome?
12 The pantry complex-takingmore than we need-isdeeply ingrained in our evolution.
13 But Mr McKenzie believed racism was ingrained in sections of the police.
14 The community instinct was ingrained in their characters through ages of custom.
15 The images from Enskede felt ingrained in his memory for all time.
16 Over the years it had been ingrained into me; steps were bad.
Другие примеры для термина "ingrained"
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Об этом термине ingrained
ingrain Глагол
Изъявительное наклонение · Прошедшее
Ingrained в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки