Instill [verb]

Definition of Instill:

implant, introduce

Synonyms of Instill:


Opposite/Antonyms of Instill:


Sentence/Example of Instill:

Floyd co-founder and CEO Kyle Hoff said using customer feedback to iterate and refine output has been a habit his brand has instilled since its origins as a Kickstarter project.

Pretty, whose father instilled in her a love of old buried stuff, wonders if there might be some noteworthy artifacts buried in her land.

At Starbucks, Brewer was largely credited with cleaning up the company’s stores and instilling a new level of discipline in its operations, as my colleague Beth Kowitt reported in her 2019 profile of the executive.

It turned out that much of the reserve had already been shipped out, making it all the more difficult for state and local officials to instill confidence in their populations that there would still be enough for booster shots.

This instilled in me a deep love for our great city and its traditions and events.

This is where the director or writer hopes to instill a feeling of unease and suspense—keeping you on your toes as your imagination takes over and tries to predict what will happen before it catches you off-guard.

Greg Young was hard on Chase growing up, saying, “I’m your father, not your fan,” and instilling a sense of accountability.

Eating that sandwich for dinner reinvigorated my faith in the turkey plan, and instilled a sense of Turkey Triumph.

Creating an action plan that outlines next steps and assignments aligns the team, keeps projects moving forward, instills accountability, and makes it possible to bring ideas to life.

I would be speaking to certain buyers and they were saying that they’ve instilled in their teams that three months is kind of long term.