Deep-rooted in a sentence as an adjective

Sure, we have deep-rooted social problems, but right now we are reinforcing those problems via our school system.

And they will tell all their acquaintances, etc, etc.. Airbnb's Achilles' heel is the deep-rooted fear of someone ******* up home.

The world of finance and credit card processing is one of the most ensconced and deep-rooted industries there is.

It's only when they read a title that feeds into some deep-rooted emotional issue or agrees with already-established biases that they claim "genuis!

This is due to a deep-rooted and very resilient urban legend that a running fan causes hypothermia in people who sleep in the same room with it and that people die because of that.

It is facile to blame all of the developing world's problems on "the same deep-rooted culture/religion problem of ignorance, corruption, and generally not giving a **** about others.

Building a precise clone of Python on the Erlang VM would be more difficult than on JVM, but more importantly, it would be pointless Python does not have the kind of deep-rooted concurrency semantics that are Erlang's raison d'etre.

They have a heavy tradition about renouncing the world and trying to be saintly; but they also have deep-rooted ambitions, hypocrisy, greed, envy, and they are broken up by castes, as human beings are everywhere else, only here it is much more brutal.

> “Generally, if you are self-made man and earn money, you are looked at with suspicion,”> there’s a deep-rooted feeling that you don’t show that you make money> It’s more like, if someone has something I can’t have, I’d rather deprive this person from having it than trying to work hard to get it myselfThis.

Deep-rooted definitions

adjective

(used especially of ideas or principles) deeply rooted; firmly fixed or held; "deep-rooted prejudice"; "deep-seated differences of opinion"; "implanted convictions"; "ingrained habits of a lifetime"; "a deeply planted need"

See also: deep-seated implanted ingrained planted