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deprogram
[ dee-proh-gram ]
verb (used with object)
deprogrammed or deprogramed, deprogramming or deprograming.
- to free (a convert) from the influence of a religious cult, political indoctrination, etc., by intensive persuasion or reeducation.
- to retrain, as for the purpose of eliminating or replacing a learned or acquired behavior pattern or habit that is undesirable or unsuitable.
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Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- »å±ð·±è°ù´Çg°ù²¹³¾Â·³¾±ð°ù »å±ð·±è°ù´Çg°ù²¹³¾Â·±ð°ù noun
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of deprogram1
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
It has been a 20-year process to deprogram that worldview.
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Clinton’s hope to deprogram Trump followers, unfortunately, faces an uphill road.
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Ramer is political director for the Republican Accountability Project, a group working to deprogram members of the Cult of Trump.
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Steven Hassan is one of the world's leading experts on cults and other dangerous organizations, as well as how to deprogram people who have succumbed to "mind control."
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“And so my entire career has been about how to deprogram myself, so that I can capture us the way we should be.â€
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