Inclined
in sentence
362 examples of Inclined in a sentence
Some are
inclined
to push harder.
By examining the voting patterns of people in individual regions of Slovakia in the 1918-1939 and 1990-1998 periods, the Slovak sociologist Vladimir Krivy revealed that municipalities and regions that
inclined
towards liberal parties in the inter-war period continued to be so disposed when freedom was restored after 1989-1998.
Trump is at the other end of today’s illiberal-capitalist spectrum: no less comfortable than Putin with deep income inequalities, but not as
inclined
to use the state to favor particular businesspeople (other than himself).
So far, however, he seems
inclined
to make one of those systems resemble the other.
With the decision about raising rates such a close call, one would think that the Fed would be
inclined
to do it this year, given that the chair and vice chair have pretty much told the market for months that this will happen.
Unfortunately, despite all we have been through in the past five years, these big banks’ shadows survive in various forms today – and regulators do not seem sufficiently
inclined
to turn on the lights.
And, rather than declare victory, as they were
inclined
to do in a mid-June statement by eurozone finance ministers, European officials should treat this compromise as the next step in softening its increasingly untenable stance on Greek debt.
For those
inclined
to see and remember, the situation in Rakhine State recalls the ethnic cleansing that occurred in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s and the even worse massacres in Rwanda in the same decade.
But many are not
inclined
to see.
Israel is now led by a prime minister who has the ability to make historic choices and a government
inclined
to support him.
One might have thought that a socialist, and a French Socialist at that, would be more
inclined
toward finance skepticism.
There will come a moment when Israel’s actions will incite people – not only the most fanatical of the country’s foes, but also the most generously
inclined
of its supporters – to question Israel’s essence.
Even in the face of strong evidence of North Korean wrongdoing, the Chinese are
inclined
to view the incident in the context of inter-Korean relations, and do not want to let it determine the fate of the Six Party Talks.
And, contrary to popular misconceptions, France today may be even more
inclined
toward federalism than Germany is.
Even if impeached, he would still be president, and Republicans would be
inclined
to defend him even more fiercely.
Neoliberal economics has reached a breaking point, causing the traditional left-right political divide to be replaced by a different split: between those seeking forms of growth that are less
inclined
toward extreme concentration and those who want to end concentration by closing open markets and societies.
For one thing, we will not be
inclined
to incorporate into machines some evolutionarily evolved behaviors of human beings, such as favoring oneself and one’s group.
It seems unlikely that Ron Paul, the libertarian chairman of the US Senate Banking Committee, who doubts that even the US needs a central bank, would be
inclined
to agree.
As a result, they are far more
inclined
than their parents to spend on services and nondurable goods.
Whereas America’s entrepreneurs had traditionally been
inclined
to create sustainable legacies, now many of them strive for an early IPO that will let them cash out quickly.
As his term winds down (the next presidential elections are two years away), he will be even less
inclined
to involve Mexico in foreign adventures.
Simply put, humans everywhere are naturally
inclined
to live within tight-knit communities.
If not, Germany may be less
inclined
to meet Macron halfway on eurozone integration.
Indeed, universities may be the most consistently performing products of long-term capital investment, especially if one is
inclined
to think about social and economic “investment” in exactly the same terms.
Given their strong self-interest in thwarting Islamist revolutionary groups, especially those aligned with Iran, they are not
inclined
to listen to the “Arab street” – which is far quieter than it was during previous conflicts, such as the 1991 war in Kuwait, the 2000-2004 Palestinian uprising, or the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war.
As a result, China will no longer be
inclined
to lend its capital to the US.
The oil sheikhs would likely be
inclined
to postpone extraction only if they could reasonably assume that the demand reductions of the signing countries and the comparative price reduction that this implies are stronger today than they will be in the future.
Putin, the gray ex-KGB man, seemed much better equipped to fill that role than more democratically
inclined
figures like, say, Sergei Stepashin, another of Yeltsin’s prime ministers, who had showed little enthusiasm for the First Chechen War in 1994.
It will be embarrassing internationally as well – seen as petty, partisan, and vindictive by most governments around the world, regardless of whether they would be
inclined
to support Rudd.
Clinicians are
inclined
to diagnose disorders that they feel more comfortable treating.
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