inˈdoctrinize, v. rare.
[f. indoctrine or indoctrinate + -ize; cf. doctrinize.]
trans. = indoctrinate 1. Hence inˌdoctriniˈzation.
| 1861 Thornbury Turner (1862) I. 19 Turner..there received..both health and learning—being at once oxygenized and indoctrinized. 1887 New Princeton Rev. Jan. 32 All that remains for specific indoctrinization may easily be left to the Sabbath-schools and the churches. |