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Implanted   /ɪmplˈæntɪd/   Listen
Implanted

adjective
1.
(used especially of ideas or principles) deeply rooted; firmly fixed or held.  Synonyms: deep-rooted, deep-seated, ingrained, planted.  "Deep-seated differences of opinion" , "Implanted convictions" , "Ingrained habits of a lifetime" , "A deeply planted need"



Implant

verb
(past & past part. implanted; pres. part. implanting)
1.
Fix or set securely or deeply.  Synonyms: embed, engraft, imbed, plant.  "The dentist implanted a tooth in the gum"
2.
Become attached to and embedded in the uterus.
3.
Put firmly in the mind.  Synonym: plant.



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"Implanted" Quotes from Famous Books



... hundred miles; but in that far-off district had met in their wanderings some of our Christian Indians from Norway House, who, always carrying their Bibles with them, had, by reading to them and praying with them, under the good Spirit's influence, implanted in their hearts longing desires after the great salvation. They were literally hungering and thirsting after salvation. Before they left for their homes, they were all baptized. Their importunate request to me on leaving was the same as that of ...
— By Canoe and Dog-Train • Egerton Ryerson Young

... with socialist and anarchist, "scientific" or otherwise, with philanthropists of every order, against the new evil and its horrors. Rich and poor alike were involved. The virus of the deadly conditions under which the garments took shape was implanted in every stitch that held them together, and transferred itself to the wearer. Not only from London, but from every city of England, came the same cry; and the public faced suddenly an abyss of misery whose existence had ...
— Women Wage-Earners - Their Past, Their Present, and Their Future • Helen Campbell

... vindicate their abuses without remorse. And yet it may be doubtful if either a nation or an individual ever tolerated or was an accessory in a wrong, that the act, sooner or later, did not recoil on the offending party, through that mysterious principle of right which is implanted in the nature of things, bringing forth its own results as the seed produces its grain, and the tree its fruits; a supervision of holiness that it is usual to term (and rightly enough, when we remember who created principles) the providence of God. Let that people dread the future, who, in their ...
— The Wing-and-Wing - Le Feu-Follet • J. Fenimore Cooper

... attention on this question, but he never for a moment doubted what the answer must be. Wherever the reasonable has revealed itself, it has always been through the operation of the divine reason. For man's lofty endowment consists in his having had a portion of the divine reason implanted within him, and in his consequent capacity of attaining a knowledge of divine things, though not a perfect and clear one, by dint of persistent efforts after truth and virtue. When man remembers his real nature and destination, that is, when he comes to himself, the divine ...
— History of Dogma, Volume 2 (of 7) • Adolph Harnack

... of immediate apprehension here since he believed that all the priests of the temple had assembled in the court above to witness his trial and his humiliation and his death, and with this idea firmly implanted in his mind he rounded the turn of the corridor and came face to face with an under priest, his grotesque headdress concealing whatever emotion the sight of Tarzan may ...
— Tarzan the Terrible • Edgar Rice Burroughs


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