Online Google Dictionary

institutionalize 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˌinstiˈt(y)o͞oSHənlˌīz/,
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institutionalises, 3rd person singular present; institutionalised, past participle; institutionalised, past tense; institutionalizing, present participle; institutionalized, past participle; institutionalized, past tense; institutionalizes, 3rd person singular present; institutionalising, present participle;
  1. Establish (something, typically a practice or activity) as a convention or norm in an organization or culture
    • - a system that institutionalizes bad behavior
  2. Place or keep (someone) in a residential institution
    • - these adolescents had more contacts with the police and were charged and institutionalized more often

  1. commit: cause to be admitted; of persons to an institution; "After the second episode, she had to be committed"; "he was committed to prison"
  2. (institutionalized) officially placed in or committed to a specialized institution; "had hopes of rehabilitating the institutionalized juvenile delinquents"
  3. Institutions are structures and mechanisms of social order and cooperation governing the behavior of a set of individuals within a given human collectivity. ...
  4. (Institutionalized (song)) "Institutionalized" is a song by the American hardcore punk band Suicidal Tendencies. It was released as the only single from their debut album, Suicidal Tendencies. ...
  5. (Institutionalization (psychology)) In clinical and abnormal psychology, institutional syndrome refers to deficits or disabilities in social and life skills, which develop after a person has spent a long period living in mental hospitals, prisons, or other remote institutions. ...
  6. to establish as a normal practice; to commit a person to confinement in an institution
  7. (institutionalization) the process of establishing a practice as a norm; the process of committing a person to a facility where their freedom to leave will be restrained, usually a mental hospital
  8. (Institutionalized) Confined, either voluntarily or involuntarily (e.g., a hospital, prison, or nursing home).
  9. (Institutionalized) cultural capital consists of institutional recognition, most often in the form of academic credentials or qualifications, of the cultural capital held by an individual. ...
  10. (institutionalized (person)) (2h)[I], POs ><, FOs away, DH strikes top of NDH and bounces up.
  11. (Institutionalization) The ingrained way of doing business that an organization follows routinely as part of its corporate culture.
  12. (Institutionalization (of change)) Integrating a specific change into the structure and ongoing functioning of an organization.
  13. (Institutionalization) Making change semi-permanent by building it into a country's institutional structure: a step that some governments try to take, so that their policies will continue after they are voted out.
  14. (Institutionalization) Syndrome occurring to hospitalized clients, characterized by a loss of identity as a person, seeing oneself instead as a patient with total dependence on external sources of reinforcement, pleasure and affirmation. ...
  15. (Institutionalization) The College takes the grant-funded program or activity into the body of its regular operation, and it becomes part of the ongoing College costs
  16. (Institutionalization) The gradual domination of financial markets by institutional investors, as opposed to individual investors. This process has occurred throughout the industrialized world.
  17. (Institutionalization) or Bureaucratization Stage: stage in social movement formation where the movement becomes more formally organized and more similar to a bureaucracy.
  18. (institutionalization (Medicaid and SSI)) Living arrangements for persons in public or private institutions when more than 50 percent of the cost of their care is met by the Medicaid program.
  19. (institutionalization) The Constitution creates a single-person presidency. Yet over more than 200 years, institutions have grown up within the presidency, with a large White House staff and offices created by and serving the president (e.g., see Office of Management and Budget).