英:[ˌɪnstɪˈtju:ʃənəlaɪzd]
美:[ˌɪnstɪˈtuʃənəlaɪzd]
英:[ˌɪnstɪˈtju:ʃənəlaɪzd]
美:[ˌɪnstɪˈtuʃənəlaɪzd]
v.
使(某事物)制度化( institutionalize的过去式和过去分词)
将(某人)收容在社会福利机构
adj.
约定俗成的;成惯例的,(因长期生活在福利机构)缺乏自理能力的
adjective
created and controlled by an established organization institutionalized religion
institutionalized housing
established as a common and accepted part of a system or culture
institutionalized beliefs and practices
placed in the care of a specialized institution
At first, the researchers … confine their studies to serial killers, mass murderers, institutionalized sociopaths …—Marilyn Stasio
The first known use of institutionalized was in 1869
institutionalizedadjective
accustomed so firmly to the care and routine of an institution as to find independent life in the outside world difficult or unmanageable
Many prisoners who only need a drug or alcohol program become more institutionalized with each mandatory return.—Robert L. Johnson, Undoing Time
1 Because of the legislation that bears her name, hundreds of thousands of children, including my own, are able to be at home with their families instead of being institutionalized.
2 Yet I think Mr. Naharin wants members of the audience to laugh when they do; he seems to be going after a certain Jacques Tati aren’t-people-strange tone: institutionalized absurdism.
3 “Just because the world of institutionalized learning tells kids they need to know the words sunny, cloudy and windy doesn’t mean they are not also capable of learning the words , blustery and scorching,” she writes.
4 In each of the studies, the researchers recognize that the clear sexism in play is a flawed, institutionalized social construction, not an example of “the way things are” naturally.
5 So while he’s incarcerated, he develops a comfort with being institutionalized.
6 “It’s a perfect example of something that’s become institutionalized and standardized to the point where it’s no longer personal, and people can’t take it.”
7 In any society built on institutionalized racism, race-mixing doesn’t merely challenge the system as unjust, it reveals the system as unsustainable and incoherent.
8 How do you work towards this finale without being institutionalized?
9 In the winter of that year, after yet another breakdown with hallucinations and hissing internal voices, he was institutionalized.
10 “It only reinforces a culture of shame and contributes to the well-documented mental health issues that a lot of fat people have because of, essentially, institutionalized weight stigma.”
11 He then spent the next three decades institutionalized before his death in 1950.
12 So, now I ask, how do we combat institutionalized brutality against women?
13 “I wish that the courts would give him a suitable punishment so that he can learn from this instead of just being institutionalized.”
14 One point that “The Hellfire Club” makes with blunt effectiveness is that Congress is home to institutionalized racial discrimination.
15 It's changed in that Project Mayhem has become institutionalized as this kind of Blackwater or Halliburton global corporation that provides military services and is basically fighting on every side of every conflict.
16 We have to remember, school is for training us to be institutionalized.
17 Both films feature stellar performances from Timothée Chalamet and Lucas Hedges, respectively, but they render the pain of addiction and institutionalized bigotry in superficial ways, mostly as engines for parental enlightenment and filial devotion.
18 That racist policing and racially biased criminal justice practices have institutionalized discrimination in the country is perhaps the single issue about which both the Koch brothers and Black Lives Matter ever agreed.
19 They set up a formal commission to go out and study institutionalized racism all over the world.
20 It’s akin to writing about higher educational disparities, or institutionalized racism, and choosing Abigail Fisher for the subject.
1 成惯例
2 习以为常
3 习以为常的
5 被接受的
6 约定俗成的