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Discover LudwigThe phrase "indoctrination by" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to describe the act of persuading or influencing someone to accept certain beliefs or ideas, often in a forceful or manipulative manner. Example: The dictator's regime was characterized by relentless indoctrination by state-run media, aimed at controlling the thoughts and opinions of the populace.
Exact(22)
Barry and Dave easily countered our attempts at indoctrination by way of their dad's gargantuan record collection.
France's immigrants – or its natives of North African heritage – seem to be more susceptible to indoctrination by radical groups.
But the economic slump of the past four years and the ensuing political instability have created fertile ground for recruitment, infiltration and indoctrination by outside groups.
He does not argue that his daughter is lying, merely that she has "come to believe she's been molested" after "many years of indoctrination" by her mother.
Israeli commentators have pointed to racist indoctrination by everyone from extremist rabbis to Beitar Jerusalem football gangs to the Haredi education system itself.
One gathered that but for the opportunities for interception afforded by China's non-membership of the International Postal Commission, indoctrination by print would run riot.
Similar(36)
This kind of fanaticism is inspired as much by indoctrination as by any real value in the show.
It recruited rural activists and patriotic youths from the cities and systematically strengthened its ranks by continuous indoctrination and by expelling dissident and ineffective party members.
Decapitations, dismembering, slow shooting in the outer limbs until the victim begs to die, teachers assassinated and their schools turned into indoctrination centers by one armed force or another, all surrounded by an otherwise peaceful jungle: these are among the stories recounted in several dozen almost chromatic paintings.
Still, anti-Japanese sentiment is prevalent in China today largely because of indoctrination ordered by fundamentally weak leaders seeking to bolster their rule through nationalism.
Nonetheless, Chang contends that "anti-Japanese sentiment is prevalent in China today largely because of indoctrination ordered by fundamentally weak leaders seeking to bolster their rule through nationalism".
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