Dictionary
is internalizing
verb
To make something internal; to incorporate it in oneself.
Exact(8)
The first is externalizing behaviour, such as aggression and hyperactivity, and the second is internalizing behaviour, such as depression and anxiety.
(A feminist will tell you that an agoraphobic is internalizing social ills, meaning her terror contains both the idea of the home as a prison and the notion that public space is inhospitable to women).
The reality seems to be that ICE is operating in courthouses in an unrestrained way because it is internalizing a sense of impunity, its expansive policies encouraged by Sessions and Kelly, and viscerally backed by Donald Trump's nativist rhetoric and policies.
Where it's succeeded is internalizing one thing it got wrong 10 years ago: As long as you don't drive the users away, you always get another chance.
The final stage is internalizing the activity by valuing it as a part of who you are.
And she is internalizing these messages in a way that will inevitably impact her self-esteem and help her define her own standards of beauty.
Similar(51)
After the binding of LF, the complex is internalized into cells through the endosomal internalization pathway.
That conflict is internalized even among children.
Not surprisingly, some of this loathing is internalized.
Lymus seems more concerned with the way the stigma is internalized.
Bateson dutifully notes another participant's accusation that her seminar was "adultist," and that courtesy is "internalized oppression".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com