Entrench in a sentence as a verb

Vista's delays didn't do much to entrench IE6.

Further, all those years of experience could have, and often do, entrench very bad habits.

If you can find one that people are ignoring and time it well, you can entrench yourself in a market before most people even realize it exists.

Or entrench the caste system even further?> India has great potential to develop into something more than it isThank you for your vote of support.

People fight to entrench certain ideologies and stigmatize others, professors fight over control of departments, careers are threatened or ruined.

Now, restrictions on building new accommodation entrench expensive neighbourhoods, and mean economic migrants can't move nearer to the employment.

With the constant trade and monopoly prices, I was able to further entrench my dominant position each month by continuing to out bid any other doctor who tried to purchase avian meat.

Frankly, Apple or Google should make this purchase just for their federal salesforce alone -- Blackberry knows how to do something those other companies don't do well and that's sell and entrench inside of Governments.

It clearly acknowledges the real cause of the problem, which is basically locally rigged markets, and actually suggests a solution that won't simply help entrench the incumbents through increased regulation similar to price and quality fixing.

Not sure if the cookie cutter form letter has less impact than other approaches, but I liked that it made me consider my personal reasons for supporting net neutrality:The success of the internet and the incredible rate of its innovation result largely from its great equality -- that it is difficult for large corporations to entrench themselves to the detriment of disruptive innovators.

Entrench definitions

verb

fix firmly or securely

See also: intrench

verb

impinge or infringe upon; "This impinges on my rights as an individual"; "This matter entrenches on other domains"

See also: impinge encroach trench

verb

occupy a trench or secured area; "The troops dug in for the night"