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indoctrinate
[ in-dok-truh-neyt ]
verb (used with object)
- to instruct in a doctrine, principle, ideology, etc., especially to imbue with a specific partisan or biased belief or point of view.
Synonyms: propagandize, brainwash
- to teach or inculcate.
- to imbue with learning.
indoctrinate
/ ɪnˈdɒktrɪˌneɪt /
verb
- to teach (a person or group of people) systematically to accept doctrines, esp uncritically
- rare.to impart learning to; instruct
Derived Forms
- inˈdoctriˌnator, noun
- inˌdoctriˈnation, noun
Other Words From
- in·doc·tri·na·tion [in-dok-tr, uh, -, ney, -sh, uh, n], noun
- in·doc·tri·na·tor noun
- re·in·doc·tri·nate verb (used with object) reindoctrinated reindoctrinating
Word History and Origins
Origin of indoctrinate1
Example Sentences
Ultimately, “everyone is capable of indoctrinating themselves at any time.”
But I was a Republican, and I had been indoctrinated in all the Republican rhetoric about how Hillary was the devil and she was terrible and we couldn't possibly have her in office.
I’ve often joked I was the perfect age to be indoctrinated.
Without these “indoctrinated boundaries,” as he calls them, he has the freedom to find — or, in the case of “Chimp Crazy,” provoke — dramatic on-screen conflicts and satisfying resolutions that traditional documentarians might not.
"There is an agenda ... where the homosexual viewpoint is being — students are being indoctrinated," he told Fox News' Bill O'Reilly in 2006.
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