释义 |
in.ter.nal.ize objBr and Aus usually -ise HIn5tV:7nEl7aIz, $-5tV:r-v [T]to accept or absorb (esp. a way of behaving or thinking) as your own, often from repeated experience, so that it becomes a natural and important part of your character使内在化He had not expected the people so readily to internalize the values of democracy and to develop a strong rejection of the values of a totalitarian system.他没有料到人民这么快就消化吸收了民主的价值观念,并有力拒绝极权主义体制的价值观念。There is some evidence to suggest that children who are abused by their parents internalize violent behaviour through social learning and in turn are violent towards their children.有证据表明,小时候受父母虐待的孩子通过社会学习将暴力行为融为自我行为的一部分,将来对自己的孩子也会采用暴力。To internalize is also to absorb feelings within yourself and not to express them to other people.使藏在心底"I internalized a lot of the pressures at the New Yorker in those early years, " he says.他说,“早期的那些年里,我将在纽约客承受的许多压力深藏在心底。”Women tend to internalize all their anxiety and distress--men hit out.妇女倾向于将焦虑和苦恼都深藏在心底,而男人则要发泄出去。
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