单词 | implant |
释义 | im·plant I. also em·plant 1. a. < a ruby implanted in a gold ring > b. < implant good habits in children > < implant in a person the idea that the end of the world is near > < such a taste … simply cannot be implanted — H.L.Mencken > 2. archaic 3. a. b. < 100 patients have been implanted with nylon ribbons without complications — U.K.Henschke > Synonyms: < the duty of Congress to see that educational institutions implant only sound ideas in the minds of students — Elmer Davis > < the teacher, the parent, or the friend can often do much to implant this conviction — C.W.Eliot > < in me especially, she implanted a respect for pioneering tradition — Rex Ingamells > < sea voyagers … may remain to implant their knowledge and practices in the new territory — C.D.Forde > inculcate lays stress on repeated persistent efforts to impress on or fix in the mind < it is no part of the duty of a university to inculcate any particular philosophy of life — Walter Moberly > < a means of inculcating in the conscripts intense patriotism and religious devotion to the state — Chitoshi Yanaga > < the seriousness inculcated in men by two cataclysmic world wars — S.P.Lamprecht > instill implies a gradual usually gentle method of imparting knowledge usually over a long period of time < the principles which had been instilled in her soul from the time she began to speak — Ruth Park > < schools must plan to instill not only knowledge, but more of permanent refined interests; not only scholarship, but more of character and social purpose — A.C.Ellis > < a profound sense of public duty will be instilled into boys and girls of the governing class as soon as they are able to understand such an idea — Bertrand Russell > II. |
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