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Example sentences for "inculcated"

Lexicographically close words:
incubator; incubators; incubi; incubus; inculcate; inculcates; inculcating; inculcation; inculpate; inculpated
  1. Then the following ideas will appear, and they will be inculcated in you whether you like it or not, by means of a living force very ancient in origin and little known.

  2. Still there is nothing in these modern circumstances to justify a departure from the reserve inculcated by the saints.

  3. I say that the very best modern tragedies exhibit and recommend that pride, ambition, vainglory, impatience, anger and revenge which are the very reverse of our Divine Master's morality inculcated in the eight beatitudes.

  4. In opposition to the orthodoxy zealousy inculcated at Oxford, rationalism found favour at the rival university of Cambridge, and vigorous support was given to the views of the Tübingen school of Baur in the London Westminster Review.

  5. That Ebel, though not from the pulpit or in the public instruction of the young, yet in private religious teaching, had inculcated his theosophical views.

  6. The poets inculcated a belief in Tartarus and Elysium.

  7. The very doctrine inculcated here by Christ just before the destruction of the city was also taught by Jeremiah before the first destruction of Jerusalem, that is, in similar circumstances, as we see from Lamentations iii:25-30.

  8. Now Christ said that He did not ordain laws as a legislator, but inculcated precepts as a teacher: inasmuch as He did not aim at correcting outward actions so much as the frame of mind.

  9. Fielding writes as follows: “It has been inculcated in us from childhood that it is a manly thing to be indifferent to pain--not to our own pain only, but to that of all others.

  10. The devil had inculcated in them a belief that, when a man died, his soul was obliged to pass a river or lake where there was a boat rowed by an old boatman; and to pay his passage they fastened some money on the arm of the dead man.

  11. They were based on principles inculcated in the youth of these early Canadian days long before Carlyle with rugged pen and organ tone declared them.

  12. One of the principal objections inculcated by the more respectable adversaries to the Constitution, is its supposed violation of the political maxim, that the legislative, executive, and judiciary departments ought to be separate and distinct.

  13. In the sequel of the inquiry through which I propose to accompany you, the truths intended to be inculcated will receive further confirmation from facts and arguments hitherto unnoticed.

  14. A reverence for the laws would be sufficiently inculcated by the voice of an enlightened reason.

  15. Now, if courage is to be inculcated by some system of training, surely it is not amiss to devote a few minutes to an analysis of the nature of courage, to seek what light we can get as to the best methods of training to employ.

  16. But most of all, the Meccanian spirit, which has been inculcated by our system of education, inspires them with the desire to excel the business men of all other nations for the sake of Meccanian Culture.

  17. Absolute obedience to the State is definitely inculcated here.

  18. Supported by many well-to-do Hindus, in 1900 she founded a college at Benares in which Hinduism might be lived and inculcated as Christianity is inculcated in the Indian Missionary Colleges.

  19. Their chief doctrine, the infallibility of the Vedas or earliest Hindu scriptures, is reactionary, although a number of reforms are inculcated in the name of a return to the Vedas.

  20. Likewise, whether directly inculcated or indirectly, some of the best features of Christian civilisation and of the Christian religion are taking hold in India and becoming naturalised.

  21. Thus the political constitution of India and its unity under Britain are inculcated among the humblest.

  22. To children who have been trained in this manner, subtraction will be quite easy; care, however, should be taken to give them a clear notion of the mystery of borrowing and paying, which is inculcated in teaching subtraction.

  23. Rousseau, with his usual eloquence, has inculcated the necessity of annexing ideas to words; he declaims against the splendid ignorance of men who speak by rote, and who are rich in words amidst the most deplorable poverty of ideas.

  24. To treat free laborers badly and unfairly, is universally inculcated as a moral duty, and the selfishness of man's nature prompts him to the most rigorous performance of this cannibalish duty.

  25. And yet are not these very errors inculcated at school, and impressed upon their mind inversely by the birch?

  26. The practice of auricular confession, which an aspiring clergy must so deeply regret, was frequently inculcated as a duty.

  27. It was studiously inculcated by the royalist lawyers that as this assembly had not been summoned by the king's writ, none of its acts could have any real validity, except by the confirmation of a true parliament.

  28. To ward off or mitigate the suffering, and to improve the comfort of society, is thus inculcated as the main and constant end for them to keep in view.

  29. How far, or with what qualifications, the Sophists inculcated the doctrine (as various commentators tell us) we do not know.

  30. Young men (he says) brought up in certain opinions inculcated by the lawgiver, as to what is just and honourable, are interrogated on these subjects, and have questions put to them.

  31. But the admission of the Nation that, in 1843, it inculcated principles having a remote tendency to effect the redemption of the country, by arms if need were, supplied the Association with a pretext for expelling it altogether.


  32. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "inculcated" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    chronic; confirmed; established; fast; fixed; implanted; incorrigible; inculcated; infixed; ingrained; instilled; inveterate; irreversible; rooted; settled; thorough