internalize

动词 v.
/ɪnˈtɝnəlaɪz/

英文释义

动词 v.
  1. To make something internal; to incorporate it in oneself. British,English,Oxford,US,transitive
    — You are not going to get good at socialising by approaching social situations like it's a formula where you do 1, 2 and 3 from a book, but books can definitely help you internalize useful things if you get what I'm saying.
  2. To make something internal; to incorporate it in oneself.; To process new information in one's mind. British,English,Oxford,US,transitive
  3. To make something internal; to incorporate it in oneself.; To refrain from expressing (a negative emotion), to one's psychological detriment; to bottle up. British,English,Oxford,US,transitive
    — Well, I can't get angry, okay? I mean, I have a tendency to internalize. I can't express anger. That's one of the problems I have—I grow a tumor instead.
  4. To store (a string or other structure) in a shared pool, such that subsequent items with the same value can share the same instance. British,English,Oxford,US,transitive
  5. To transfer stocks between brokers within an organization, rather than through the exchange. British,English,Oxford,US

词形变化

internalizes present,singular,third-person internalizing participle,present internalized participle,past internalized past internalise alternative

词源

Etymology tree
English internal
Proto-Indo-European *-id-
Proto-Indo-European *-yéti
Proto-Indo-European *-idyéti
Proto-Hellenic *-íďďō
Ancient Greek -ῐ́ζω (-ĭ́zō)bor.
Late Latin -izōder.
Middle French -iserbor.
Middle English -isen
English -ize
English internalize
From internal + -ize.
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