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Перевод: ingrained
[прилагательное] врожденный; укоренившийся; закоренелый; прочно укоренившийся; застарелый; проникающий; пропитывающий; вкрапленный; органический
Тезаурус:
- But soon the consciousness of security became so ingrained that we lost all temptation to enquire about the nature of work with which we were not immediately concerned.
- That is, when success occurs occasionally, not every time, and in a fairly random fashion, the behaviour that has produced this variable success becomes very ingrained and is difficult to eradicate.
- But hopelessness, like the class system, had now become so ingrained in the soul, she feared that it could be removed neither by stimuli nor legislation.
- We noted the grim approaches; incessant traffic noise in narrow streets; parked vehicles hemming in the pavement; rubbish dumps on waste land nearby; the absence of green playing spaces on or near the school sites; tiny playgrounds; gaunt looking buildings; often poor decorative conditions inside; narrow passages; dark rooms; unheated and cramped cloakrooms; unroofed outside lavatories; tiny staff rooms; inadequate storage space with consequent restrictions on teaching materials and therefore methods; inadequate space for movement and P.E.; meals in classroom; art on desks; music only to the discomfort of others in an echoing building; non-soundproof partitions between classes; lack of smaller rooms for group work; lack of spare room for tuition of small groups; insufficient display space; attractive books kept unseen in cupboards for lack of space to lay them out; no privacy for parents wishing to see the head; sometimes the head and his secretary sharing the same room; and, sometimes all around, the ingrained grime of generations.
- These forms of repetitive and obsessive behaviour become so ingrained in the horse, that they become part of the horse's ordinary behaviour even when it is not bored.
- We would have to develop an ingrained self-confidence in our ability to navigate across featureless terrain without any back-up whatsoever and using maps that gave little or no detail.
- Their faults seem so deeply ingrained, from quantitative measures and bogus statistics to valueless currencies and not caring about the environment.
- A new civil-rights law, in whatever form, is bound not to address the ingrained attitudes that still work against blacks.
- The passionate faith in the deep influence of the soil on man might at first sight appear to be an idea which a Marxist regime could easily harness to its own ideology, as was the Russian peasant's deeply ingrained sense of co-operative toil on the land, a notion likewise derived from his dvoeverie.
- She took a lot of convincing: distrust was deeply ingrained in her, she dared not believe in good fortune; she was conditioned to thinking in terms of Lajos and adjustment took some time.
- For, alongside the conviction politics, and the violent rhetoric, was in practice an ingrained pragmatism.
- People's eating habits and food preferences are learned; they are habits that become ingrained over a period of years.
- But alike in the British and the American traditions the expectation that the poet would have a message was so ingrained that even by those readers most alert to and informed about Eliot's French connections The Waste Land was still thought to deliver an urgent signal - usually about the bankruptcy of the European, or the Western, cultural and civic traditions.
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