0 past simple and past participle of internalize
1 to accept or absorb an idea, opinion, belief, etc. so that it becomes part of your character:
He had not expected the people so readily to internalize the values of democracy.
A fair energy market would include a greater emphasis on internalizing environmental costs.
You will get more willingness to sue when the costs of trial aren't internalized by the party making the decision to go to trial.
It was advised not as an internalized intellectual activity but as a social and communal process.
That is, if word-initial target voiced obstruents had been internalized incorrectly as voiceless, they would have been realized as voiceless, contrary to the actual facts.
Perceiving must essentially involve the matching of external gestalts to internalized representations in long-term memory.
However, these productive abilities alone might not suffice for the expression of internalized thoughts at later periods in the language acquisition process.
They foreground the trauma of double displacement, either as an experience already internalized or as a phenomenon about to occur.
This assumes that impacts of crop choice on on-farm erosion and productivity are internalized.
Derivational theories predict that overgeneralization errors can follow from the combined effect of incorrectly internalized underlying representations and rule loss.
If metacognition is the internalized cognitive guidance of the parent, one will not see it in monkeys who don't parent in that way.