Institutionalize in a sentence as a verb

> Can't we just institutionalize the hype cycle?

I would loathe it if I had to institutionalize this complexity in the form of an app.

On the other hand, it's a great way to have their audience choose first and then institutionalize the popular options.

I don't think there will be any constitutional issues with institutionalized treatment of a child who has threatened to **** someone.

No investor wants to institutionalize that 30% of their companies will receive bad signaling by default.

And that it doesn't work, because the solution is not to further institutionalize discrimination just because some people can't cope with equality.

Even if under this proposal these mobs eventually institutionalize into the "police" and "courts," there is now the problem of corruption.

I'm afraid this is what you get when you architect your political system to institutionalize gerrymandering.

' We'll institutionalize them now because it is a darn sight cheaper than institutionalizing them later, permanently.

America had a movement to "de-institutionalize", that is, to help known mentally ill people adapt and cope with day-to-day life instead of locking them all in asylums.

People who subscribe to this definition really don't believe in meritocracy as it's generally viewed as a way to institutionalize white male advantage.

"Scrum" is often an attempt to take micromanagement, or the low-status programmer culture, and institutionalize it in a way that seems impersonal and policy-based.

However if you're stalking a psychiatrist, the psychiatrist can, as a professional psychiatrist, evaluate you and decide to institutionalize you.

So rent-seeking policies that institutionalize certain business interests would be avoided, for example.

Institutionalize definitions

verb

cause to be admitted; of persons to an institution; "After the second episode, she had to be committed"; "he was committed to prison"

See also: commit institutionalise send charge