0 past simple and past participle of inculcate
1 to fix beliefs or ideas in someone's mind, especially by repeating them often:
Other writers inculcated similar principles of mapping in encouraging attendance at the exposition.
The interest in hygiene intersected with a maternalist discourse that inculcated the values of domesticity and celebrated the virtues of motherhood.
Together they tried to force a literal, dogmatic orthodoxy on believers instead of the true spiritual faith, which could not be inculcated by force.
Putting the partial and particular in tension with the universal, objectivity has inculcated a characteristic ideal of personality.
The teaching of the schools inculcated basic linguistic skills upon which one could subsequently build ever more sophisticated linguistic accomplishments.
He had inculcated the collected works into his bloodstream and saw them as a gushing river with innumerable tributaries.
We can have a multiethnic, multicultural, multi-religious, and multilingual nation sharing common values inculcated by a common syllabus.
A story is a structural abstraction inculcated through repetition into human memory.