0 past simple and past participle of inculcate --
1 to fix beliefs or ideas in someone's mind, especially by repeating them often: --
The fundamental basic feeling inculcated in every prep.
Historical patterns of behaviour are inculcated in every child through education, whether formal or informal, through rituals and games, and through learned behaviour in the broadest sense.
Smith disliked the practice of boarding schools, arguing that it was the parent above all who inculcated the capacity to sympathize and to listen to one's impartial spectator.
Valorization, first, of a specific practice regarding patients that allows medical values to be gradually inculcated with the personal professional experience necessary to develop an ethical opinion.
Specifically, the mindset inculcated by such a health system allows the perpetuation of the draining of funds into technical medicine to the neglect of the creation of healthy environments.
After all, they have been trained in science to be objective observers, and they have been inculcated in evidence-based medicine, which is based on rigorous evaluation of facts.
For heroic 'acts' to become celebrated, achievements had to 'inculcated' in the public imagination.
A story is a structural abstraction inculcated through repetition into human memory.