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internalisation

Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun chiefly UK Alternative spelling of internalization.

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • noun learning (of values or attitudes etc.) that is incorporated within yourself

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

internalise +‎ -ation

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Examples

  • Furthermore, after exposure to stress, male rats had an adaptive response, called internalisation, in their brain cells.

    Daily News & Analysis 2010

  • Actually, if I wasn't so ashamed of my cowardice, vanity, too posh to pushness and internalisation of gynophobic values, I'd definitely confess to my elective, NHS caesarean.

    Please, render unto caesareans a little less hysteria | Catherine Bennett 2011

  • If the internalisation of the values appropriate to it fails, then civil liberties are threatened — on the one side by the growth of crime and private violence, and on the other by the growth of governmental intervention to contain them.

    Thanks For Telling Me What I Think « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG Inspector Gadget 2009

  • In Andaios's view, the internalisation of Resistance values was vital because the future of the new society rested in the hands of the young.

    Arms and the Woman: Just Warriors and Greek Feminist Identity 2008

  • These experiments clearly show that self-esteem and the internalisation of gender stereotypes play a decisive role in the scores obtained in this type of test.

    What Do Boys and Girls Draw? » Sociological Images 2009

  • The final point about the ghettoisation of women, and the attendant internalisation of misogyny, is one that deserves a whole section to itself.

    Strange Attractor » 2008 » September 2009

  • Those who decide to meet him can also claim that ongoing diplomacy and dialogue lead to the internalisation of international norms and thus moderate extremism.

    Avigdor Lieberman, Israel's Shame 2009

  • It is widely held that Hume's moral philosophy is essentially Hutchesonian, and that Hume took a stage further Hutcheson's projects of internalisation and of grounding our experience of the world on sentiment or feeling.

    Scottish Philosophy in the 18th Century Broadie, Alexander 2009

  • But emotion - along with its internalisation (in the psychological sense) can create pride and blindness.

    On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with... 2009

  • I do balk a bit at the concept of race as an ‘external “classification” ‘— while there’s something to be said about the way that society imposes its labels upon you, there’s also a great deal to be said about how that classification becomes internalised and how that internalisation plays out in your day-to-day life.

    Remnant update « Love | Peace | Ohana 2007

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