Ingrained Sentence Examples

ingrained
  • She wanted to wake up with his scent ingrained in her skin.

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  • Pain and sin must have been reduced to a minimum by God; though they are so ingrained in the finite that we have to make up our minds even to the endless sin and endless punishments of hell.

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  • It is far harder to break ingrained bad habits than to learn properly in the first place.

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  • Dogs have an ingrained need to chew, and they'll chew anything available unless you teach them not to.

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  • Most of the songs are so ingrained that we can sing along whenever we happen across them.

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  • These can be deeply ingrained and sometimes lifelong inflexible attitudes and behaviors.

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  • It requires that we consciously abandon the deeply ingrained conceit that we have any goodness in and of ourselves, apart from God.

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  • The youth was resentful of what he regarded as curmudgeonly treatment, a bitterness became ingrained and began to corrode his whole nature; and although lie came in time to grasp the real state of the case he never mentioned his uncle with kindness or regard.

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  • Hopefully he will become so ingrained in the habit of using the box that you can slowly allow him more freedom.

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  • The models usually last around three scenes before ingrained dirt and cracked limbs make them rather unphotogenic.

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  • Several incidents that took place at this visit have deeply ingrained in her mind that what she thinks is true.

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  • It will be more of the same from me; writing is too ingrained a habit to break!

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  • But whatever it is, it's now ingrained in the process, both as a voyager of discovery and of confirmation.

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  • The complaints reveal secrecy is still " indelibly ingrained " in British public authorities.

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  • In other words, the schwa deletion pattern is not ingrained in the model itself.

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  • If he was already soiling outside of the litter box, then the habit was probably ingrained, and neutering wouldn't affect it much.

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  • It is very difficult to get a cat to stop kneading because it is so instinctive and ingrained in them since kittenhood.

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  • Whether you are buying a men's cologne for yourself or another, keep that image in your mind - scent memories are ingrained within your soul.

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  • If you're an old school sort of male whose tastes are ingrained and who really knows what he likes in a fragrance, you'll probably find one of your favorite classics at a drugstore.

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  • This response is a deeply ingrained reaction that helped our ancestors to survive in a dangerous world.

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  • Others are worn by people with silk-screened text, or ingrained stock, personal dog photos or custom images imprinted into the T shirt.

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  • A deeply ingrained, inflexible pattern of relating, perceiving, and thinking that is serious enough to cause distress or impaired functioning defines a personality disorder.

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  • Because they can be very good at keeping their problem from friends and family, many sufferers do not get the help they need until the behaviors are deeply ingrained habits and hard to change.

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  • Magazines then feature these editorials and fashion trends relating to women wearing size four and under, and thus the ingrained perceptions of negativity against plus size models and average size consumers continue to be fed and nurtured.

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  • The more equations that are solved, the more ingrained the concept can become.

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  • Pregnant women need as much water as anyone else so if you don't drink enough water already, try to find ways to meet your minimum requirement before you are pregnant so it becomes an ingrained habit.

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  • From the further use of "grain" for the texture of substances, such as wood, meat, &c., "engrained" or "ingrained" means ineradicable, impregnated, dyed through and through.

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  • Much more important than logic was his unfailing ability to appeal to deeply ingrained prejudices and beliefs.

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  • These habits became deeply ingrained in his design psyche.

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  • The grime of the street gets ingrained in their souls.

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  • Despite all that bullying streak within my recent development, the thoroughly decent good sort of chap was still there, firmly ingrained.

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  • The very essence of their philosophy was the negation of the graces of social courtesy; it was impossible to "return to nature" in the midst of a society clothed in the accumulated artificiality of evolved convention without shocking the ingrained sensibilities of its members.

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  • You can remove the foil later once your kittens good litter habits become ingrained.

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  • The current economic crisis may assist people in consuming less, but these habits must be ingrained and remain in force when things pick up again.

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  • It may not have been the epitome of what is considered stylish today, but it had its share of successful looks that have ingrained themselves in our memories forever.

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  • While women were very rarely pirates, the idea of female pirates - or at least wenches - is fully ingrained in the psyche.

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  • When arguments become petty, habitual, or violent, however, a couple should consider finding someone who can help resolve disputes before they become ingrained problems and destroy the relationship.

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  • Over many thousands of years, those roles of responsibility that were inherent for human survival became ingrained into the human genetic makeup.

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  • There are few ideas more ingrained in ancient and low civilization than that of relationship by descent between the lower animals and man.

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  • The taking of fees, the pride of professional success, and the teaching of rhetoric are no proofs either of conscious charlatanism or of ingrained depravity.

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  • Despite his monstrous habits of shredding anything in his path, he had a sense of honor more deeply ingrained than she'd ever suspected.

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  • Alexander had at first trusted Persian grandees more freely in this capacity; in Babylonia, Bactria, Carmania, Susiana he had set Persian governors, till the ingrained Oriental tradition of misgovernment so declared itself that to the three latter provinces certainly Macedonians had been appointed before his death.

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  • The notion of scarcity is so ingrained in us and so permeates the world today, it is difficult to imagine a world without it.

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  • The copy, together with the many careful and highly finished preparatory studies for the heads, limbs and draperies which have been preserved, shows that this must have been the one of DUrer's pictures in which he best combined the broader vision and simpler habits of design which had impressed him in the works of Italian art with his own inherited and ingrained love of unflinchingly grasped fact and rugged, accentuated character.

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  • But he laid too much stress on reasoning as syllogism or deduction, and on deductive science; and he laid too much stress on the linguistic analysis of rational discourse into proposition and terms. These two defects remain ingrained in technical logic to this day.

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