Inclined
in sentence
362 examples of Inclined in a sentence
Recent horror films seem more
inclined
to thrill than to chill.
Some interesting passages--and a bizarre climax--yet one is
inclined
to believe the film may have been pared down in post-production...it feels truncated and tampered with.
If you are so inclined, you can enjoy a couple of strapping, greased-up muscleboys wrestling in a bar; live cockfighting; piranha attacks; occasional cannibalism; a weird tribal ritual involving grass skirts and Halloween 'spooky-hands'; and copious amounts of completely unnecessary female nudity, stripping, girl-on-girl action, and the usual titillating 'rape' scenes.
Maybe once they put away their private jets and highly consumptive lifestyles, I might be
inclined
to listen.
This may be his first 'great' movie, but in some sections it betrays his relative inexperience as a film maker - it slightly loses focus in the central part of the movie and he occasionally over-eggs his metaphors (something Kurosawa was always
inclined
to do).
Co-scripted by Dylan Thomas, this tale of three ageing and infirm, although philanthropically inclined, spinster sisters presiding over a crumbling mansion in 1930s South Wales is an oddball post-War slice of Welsh Gothic.
One of the reviewers here called this film depressing, and I
inclined
to agree.
"Stiletto Dance" is all about Roberts as a deep cover cop who's
inclined
to go so "deep" even his own partner doesn't trust him.
If one nation -- say, Yugoslavia -- is otherwise
inclined
to abuse its citizens, it will perceive no reciprocal benefit from compliance with an international norm that requires greater respect for human rights.
The world watches and wonders whether China will follow Japan’s path and emerge as a fully modern yet peacefully
inclined
country.
Despite income growth, households are reluctant to consume and build; and, despite a surge in profits, companies are not
inclined
to take risks and invest.
Now that re-election is behind him, Obama could be
inclined
to take more risks, with an eye toward securing his economic legacy.
President Mauricio Macri’s year-old administration is naturally
inclined
toward economic liberalism, and Argentina is caught today in the straitjacket of the external tariff of the Mercosur regional trade agreement with Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
Lying PoliticiansThe suspicion that politicians are
inclined
to tell lies is as old as politics itself.
Iraq, ravaged by war and now shaken daily by violence, is known as the most intellectually
inclined
of the Arab countries.
New economic evidence serves at best to nudge the views – a little here, a little there – of those
inclined
to be open-minded.
But the double game proved unsustainable: the Islamists were less
inclined
than their now-ambivalent patron to draw sophistical distinctions between one kind of enemy and another.
But experience has shown that bondholders are not
inclined
to subordinate their claims to some untested international bankruptcy court.
And even if US parts producers were to expand production, they would be
inclined
to automate as much of it as possible, rather than hire more workers.
What is clear is that Chinese entrepreneurs and investors – who have been complaining for years about the heavy tax burden in China – are far more
inclined
to agree with the World Bank than more favorable comparisons and indices.
With national supervisors, who are often
inclined
to present a rosy picture of their countries’ institutions, no longer in charge, we can hope that the assessment will be more robust than the earlier stress tests carried out under the auspices of the European Banking Authority (EBA).
While I would strongly argue that the FSA in my day did not favor firms unduly, it is perhaps true that we – and in this we were exactly like US regulators – were
inclined
to believe that markets were generally efficient.
I am
inclined
to believe that the problem of malnutrition in poor countries has little to do with technology or development as such.
And is it credible to place the blame overwhelmingly on the US, as Gorbachev and certainly the Kremlin are
inclined
to do?
Even if Germany did ease its fiscal policy, German investors would still be
inclined
to place funds abroad, so long as domestic interest rates remain exceptionally low, the ECB remains a willing buyer of high-priced securities, and yields are more attractive elsewhere.
Financial analysts are
inclined
to explain it in terms of America’s extraordinarily well-developed financial markets, which promise unparalleled liquidity.
Spahn is determined to keep older, conservative, religiously
inclined
voters from abandoning the CDU for the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD).
He can expect little if any help from his own party which, preoccupied by the need to find a new leader to succeed the unfortunate Juppe, is now paying the price of Chirac's inability to communicate effectively with the French people and is not
inclined
to consult him about its new choice.
And, despite the resistance of Saudi Arabia and the Sunni opposition, the US and the EU currently seem more
inclined
to accept Iran’s inclusion in the Geneva II negotiations, especially now that advances are being made in the implementation of the international agreement on Iran’s nuclear program concluded in November.
As the Chinese government seeks international backing for its crackdown on terrorism, local Uyghurs seem less
inclined
to voice their frustrations than ever before.
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