ingrained in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

ingrained in the PONS Dictionary

ingrained Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to be (very/deeply) ingrained in a culture/a country
to be/become ingrained in sth
American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
As this practice became ingrained into modern western culture, it has taken on the simple role of a final warning before a photograph is taken.
en.wikipedia.org
Further, he often stated that it was inconceivable to think that an ingrained human social system such as public schooling was easily reformed.
en.wikipedia.org
A real label, but one in which the proprietor's personality was very much ingrained.
en.wikipedia.org
The religion is deeply ingrained in their culture and traditions, respecting the superiority of our natural world and its power.
en.wikipedia.org
The ingrained philosophy is a world economy based on market principles and effective regulation.
en.wikipedia.org
Due to superstition ingrained in local custom, she is not allowed in the mine unlike the male engineers.
en.wikipedia.org
Deeply ingrained in the world view was the concept of duality and opposition.
en.wikipedia.org
It is clear that you can't tell a significant and deeply ingrained strand of procurement policy when you see it.
en.wikipedia.org
If such perceived differences are observed across multiple interactions, in multiple contexts, they may become ingrained as a status belief.
en.wikipedia.org
His mendacity is so ingrained and pervasive, it seems, that he'll even lie about himself.
www.huffingtonpost.com

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