indoctrinate (Meaning)

Wordnet

indoctrinate (v)

teach doctrines to; teach uncritically

Webster

indoctrinate (v. t.)

To instruct in the rudiments or principles of learning, or of a branch of learning; to imbue with learning; to instruct in, or imbue with, principles or doctrines; to teach; -- often followed by in.

indoctrinate Sentence Examples

  1. The political party's relentless propaganda aimed to indoctrinate the masses with their ideology.
  2. The cult leader used fear and manipulation to indoctrinate his followers into believing his every word.
  3. The schools were tasked with indoctrinating students with the values and beliefs of the ruling government.
  4. The prisoners were subjected to intense psychological indoctrination to break their spirits and force them into submission.
  5. The ideology had been successfully indoctrinated into the minds of the people, making them immune to counterarguments.
  6. The child was raised in an environment where religious beliefs were indoctrinated from birth.
  7. The military's training regime was designed to indoctrinate recruits with unwavering loyalty and discipline.
  8. The indoctrination process lasted for weeks, slowly chipping away at the individuals' critical thinking abilities.
  9. The government's education system was accused of indoctrinating students with a biased worldview.
  10. The propaganda leaflets were carefully crafted to indoctrinate the enemy population with fear and despair.

FAQs About the word indoctrinate

teach doctrines to; teach uncriticallyTo instruct in the rudiments or principles of learning, or of a branch of learning; to imbue with learning; to instruct in

educate,teach, lesson, train, school,instruct, retrain, preach, lecture, coach

No antonyms found.

The political party's relentless propaganda aimed to indoctrinate the masses with their ideology.

The cult leader used fear and manipulation to indoctrinate his followers into believing his every word.

The schools were tasked with indoctrinating students with the values and beliefs of the ruling government.

The prisoners were subjected to intense psychological indoctrination to break their spirits and force them into submission.