Sentence examples for entrenched knowledge from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(1)

The phrase "entrenched knowledge" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe knowledge that is deeply ingrained or firmly established within a person or organization.
Example: "The company's entrenched knowledge about market trends gave it a competitive advantage over its rivals."
Alternatives: "deep-rooted knowledge" or "firmly established knowledge."

Exact(2)

It is between the established system and the new forms of wealth rising up to displace it all the entrenched knowledge of the past and the insurrections of futuristic enterprise and invention.

Similarly one would expect other corporate buzzwords like "innovation" and "disruption" to mean something different in the academy--something in line with advancing new ways of thinking and challenging received and entrenched knowledge.

Similar(56)

This Eurocentric approach to childhood is backed by years of Western knowledge, entrenched in science and society, which is therefore deemed to be superior (Ebrahim 2012, p. 80).

It could have been easy to raise us as precocious fans with encyclopedic baseball knowledge; we were entrenched.

The folk idea that skill at action is not a manifestation of intellectual knowledge is also entrenched in contemporary philosophy, though it has antecedents dating back to the ancients.

The programme is entrenched in the Mode II knowledge economy, and therefore often functions to smoothen the transition of technoscience into public spaces and to maximise economic promise (Gibbons et al, 1994).

It makes obvious sense for a secretary of state to want at his side a personal appointee possessing specialist knowledge, to argue with entrenched interests.

"Chinese and Vietnamese criminal networks have become ever more deeply entrenched in Mozambique, secure in the knowledge that being caught smuggling ivory, rhino horn or any other wildlife product can usually be resolved by paying a fine or a bribe.

The act of eschewing new knowledge because it contradicts entrenched norms is often called a 'Semmelweis reflex'.

In using the WAR metaphor, the EPD taps into this implicit knowledge and its affective potentials uniquely entrenched in the psyche of the English-speaking audience.

The knowledge of health disparities have long been entrenched in the Black community.

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