institutionalize

institutionalize
in·sti·tu·tion·al·ize or chiefly Brit in·sti·tu·tion·al·ise .in(t)-stə-'t(y)ü-shnəl-.īz, -shən-əl- vt, -ized or chiefly Brit -ised; -iz·ing or chiefly Brit -is·ing
1) to place in or commit to an institution (as a nursing home or hospital) offering specialized care (as for mental illness, substance abuse, or terminal illness)
2) to accustom (a person) so firmly to the care and supervised routine of an institution as to make incapable of managing a life outside
in·sti·tu·tion·al·iza·tion or chiefly Brit in·sti·tu·tion·al·isa·tion -.t(y)ü-shnəl-ə-'zā-shən, -.t(y)ü-shən-əl- n

Medical dictionary. 2011.

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  • institutionalize — in·sti·tu·tion·al·ize /ˌin stə tü shə nə ˌlīz, tyü / vt ized, iz·ing: to put in the care of an institution compare commit Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 …   Law dictionary

  • institutionalize — to put into institutional life (usually depreciatory), 1905; see INSTITUTION (Cf. institution). Related: Institutionalized. Earlier (1865) it meant to make into an institution …   Etymology dictionary

  • institutionalize — (Amer.) ,in·sti tu·tion·al·ize || ‚ɪnstɪtuːʃənlaɪz / tjuː v. transform something into an institution (i.e. custom, law, pattern of behavior); place a person in an institution (also institutionalise) …   English contemporary dictionary

  • institutionalize — (also institutionalise) ► VERB 1) establish as a norm in an organization or culture: claims that racism is institutionalized in education. 2) place in a residential institution. 3) (be/become institutionalized) suffer the adverse effects of long… …   English terms dictionary

  • institutionalize — [in΄stə to͞o′shə nəlīz΄, in΄stə tyo͞o′shə nəlīz΄] vt. institutionalized, institutionalizing 1. to make into or consider as an institution 2. to place in an institution, as for treatment or detention institutionalization n …   English World dictionary

  • institutionalize — UK [ˌɪnstɪˈtjuːʃ(ə)nəˌlaɪz] / US [ˌɪnstɪˈtuʃən(ə)lˌaɪz] verb [transitive] Word forms institutionalize : present tense I/you/we/they institutionalize he/she/it institutionalizes present participle institutionalizing past tense institutionalized… …   English dictionary

  • institutionalize — [[t]ɪ̱nstɪtju͟ːʃənəlaɪz, AM tu͟ː [/t]] institutionalizes, institutionalizing, institutionalized (in BRIT, also use institutionalise) 1) VERB: usu passive If someone such as a sick, mentally ill, or old person is institutionalized, they are sent… …   English dictionary

  • institutionalize — transitive verb ( ized; izing) Date: 1865 1. to make into an institution ; give character of an institution to < institutionalized housing >; especially to incorporate into a structured and often highly formalized system < institutionalized… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • institutionalize — in|sti|tu|tion|al|ize also institutionalise BrE [ˌınstıˈtju:ʃənəlaız US ˈtu: ] v [T] 1.) old fashioned to put someone in an institution for old people, a mental hospital etc 2.) to make something a normal, accepted part of a social system or… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • institutionalize — in|sti|tu|tion|al|ize [ ,ınstı tuʃənl,aız ] verb transitive 1. ) to put someone in an institution such as a prison or a hospital, especially for a long period of time 2. ) to give something a formal or official structure: We hope the new council… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • institutionalize — institutionalization, n. /in sti tooh sheuh nl uyz , tyooh /, v.t., institutionalized, institutionalizing. 1. to make institutional. 2. to make into or treat as an institution: the danger of institutionalizing racism. 3. to place or confine in an …   Universalium

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