Inoculate in a sentence as a verb

He's helping inoculate his students and those aware of the hoax against gullibility in the future. How is that not a net benefit?

If you succeed though, it not only makes you happier, it also seems to inoculate you against pretentiousness.

Bring in microorganisms, bacteria and fungal spores, from healthy forests, and inoculate this one?

Parents of young children: the time to inoculate your children against this tool of sociopaths is now. Communicate your love with every word and embrace, and you'll fill a reservoir that will never go dry.

Most of the time people do not use such linguistic qualifiers out of some desire for self-protection or having some mechanism to inoculate them from some horrible thing that follows. It's simply a shortcut.

Does an MBA inoculate someone from making these judgment errors? If so, I personally know multiple MBA-holders who've made similar errors who should be informed that they deserve their money back or something.

I suspect the genisis of this immunity was to inoculate prosecutors from coercion by politicians - which is probably a good thing. But I would be curious to know about the logic behind it.

Or do they just inoculate volunteers from the highest "at-risk" population -- but then, how do they measure if people have been exposed eventually to the virus or not?

The above is of course what is "below the fold" and the "to be sure" statement that is supposed to inoculate against accusations of being misleading. But above the fold of course is the link bait title that draws you in and makes you think that something terribly wrong has happened with this cash out.

Just because we haven't figured out how to inoculate ourselves against power accumulation as a society doesn't mean it's impossible or wrong. I haven't read Foucault, but I'm pretty sure he answers a lot of your questions.

Lightly make fun of programmers and inoculate your student against religious wars over syntax, idioms, editors, tools, and anything else that gets in the way of them learning. Remember, you are writing this book for them, not your fellow coder friends.

No, this is incredibly conservative, and there is no reason to think that more Gigaflops will inoculate us. Because, if a problem is in fact endemic to a system, then the exponential effects of Moore’s Law also serve to amplify what’s broken.

Jonas Salk developed the polio vaccine, which was used to inoculate millions. Just about every medical procedure used in practice and documented in textbooks was developed by the best doctors, systematized, and then scaled out.

The problem with accepting this is that the point of clientside crypto is to inoculate users from the downside risks of the simple security flaws that most applications have. What's the point of sophisticated clientside crypto if it's undone by any trivial XSS flaw?

Even heroin goes through cycles where a new generation comes along that hasn't seen anyone die of heroin, they make heroin cool for a while, and then the horrifying results inoculate the culture against the idea that heroin is cool for another fifteen or twenty years. Lisp will get another chance, and it can afford to wait.

Given that the US is aiming to inoculate near 90% of the population for the current influenza problem, your deductions about distribution may need to be examined more closely.

I'm beginning to wonder if tiny/slight fonts are a conscious plot to inoculate a product against too much use by uncool old people... sort of the reverse of places that use high-pitched whines to annoy youngsters away.

Militarism is the cancer at the heart of almost every government, most notably the USA. Even Carter wasn't able to inoculate it. Although most Americans don't want war - it is not cultural - those people in Washington want nothing more for the exact same reasons Sassoon described.

I would guess that many of these are fairly easy mistakes to make if you haven't been inoculated. For most people, I think a single article like this is enough to "inoculate" -- to make the reader substantially more aware of potential mistakes / hidden assumptions in their social interactions, and likely change their behavior.

But the HR process of every moderately professional company in the world is designed in part to inoculate them from "implied contract" claims, so having an offer withdrawn is unlikely to leave you with a viable implied contract claim. Eleven states, including CA and MA, honor some "covenant of good faith" process.

Even if you don't think that vaccines are 'manipulating nature,' I would say that mounting global campaigns to inoculate everyone and completely eradicate a disease is 'manipulating nature.'

I get the impression that the author wanted to dispense with all of the usual preconceptions about Marxism right at the beginning, to inoculate the essay against the reflexive prejudice people tend to have about Marx.

Does an MBA inoculate someone from making these judgment errors? If so, I personally know multiple MBA-holders who've made similar errors who should be informed that they deserve their money back or something. An MBA inoculates somebody from making poor decisions just as much as anybody having expertise in any specific field.

Really an odd way to show you are for differing viewpoints, to inoculate "prospective watchers" by opening the floodgates to a host of disparate subjects that have nothing to do with the topic at hand, all the while winking and nudging that he is a bigot regarding said subjects.

Inoculate definitions

verb

introduce an idea or attitude into the mind of; "My teachers inoculated me with their beliefs"

verb

introduce a microorganism into

verb

perform vaccinations or produce immunity in by inoculation; "We vaccinate against scarlet fever"; "The nurse vaccinated the children in the school"

See also: immunize immunise vaccinate

verb

insert a bud for propagation

verb

impregnate with the virus or germ of a disease in order to render immune