Inclined
in sentence
362 examples of Inclined in a sentence
Taking together the current trends and cycles in global factors (US interest rates, the US dollar’s strength, and world commodity prices) plus a variety of adverse country-specific economic and political developments that have recently plagued some of the larger EMs, I am
inclined
to the second interpretation.
But it is middle powers – those economies with the most to lose – that may be best positioned to preserve a system that Trump seems
inclined
to dismantle.
The weaker the civilian leadership has become, the more China has been
inclined
to discard Deng Xiaoping’s dictum tao guang yang hui (hide brightness, nourish obscurity).
Yet, rather than regarding these measures as necessary but insufficient, too many Americans will instead be
inclined
to conclude – incorrectly – that restrictions are ineffective except in their very narrow role as temporary circuit breakers.
Unlike Trump or Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, Merkel and Macron are not
inclined
to deploy the politics of emotion.
Some of these academic studies question the direction of causation, asking whether countries with highly inflation-averse populations – Germany being the most obvious example – are
inclined
to favor robust independence.
They will be
inclined
to move funds at the slightest sign of danger, which will add substantially to market volatility.
Having calculated that the reputational risks of slightly higher inflation are smaller than those associated with a downturn after a rate hike, the Fed will not be
inclined
to raise rates for the time being.
One likely reason is university governance: faculty run these institutions, and few are
inclined
to go down a path that would reduce demand for their services.
Often, people who lack Internet access are not
inclined
to change that fact.
With the population exhausted and demoralized by the conflict and its outcome, the government was not
inclined
to impose new taxes.
But even if Mueller, a by-the-book man, had been
inclined
to challenge the rule in the courts, doing so could have taken a great deal of time.
Meanwhile – in yet another vote of no confidence in the US – Taiwan seems increasingly
inclined
to reconcile with China.
There is little reason to think that Russia, which has never been particularly
inclined
toward long-term peace-building, will be able to mediate, let alone underwrite, durable peace agreements.
After all, in the hands of policymakers so inclined, national currencies are an obvious economic weapon.
In the United Kingdom, conservative pragmatism and the search for consensus eventually became a source of frustration for more radically
inclined
Labourites as well as ultra-Tories.
Against this background, those who appreciate the power of cross-border interconnectivity to unleash win-win economic opportunities and reduce the risk of major military conflicts will be
inclined
to defend the pre-pandemic status quo.
But even if all voters were receiving accurate information, some still might be
inclined
to put partisanship above the protection of liberal democratic institutions.
– If it were for the party, for the greater good, then yes, I’d be
inclined
to forgive him.
For lack of a better alternative, we may be instinctively
inclined
to look inward in order to circumvent or at least mitigate the risks of a world that feels like end times, in which children are telling us the truth.
We absolutely must drive down the risks of interpersonal contact so that those who feel they must return to work can do so, and so that those
inclined
to self-isolate voluntarily can return to schools and full economic activity, feeling relatively safe.
Levin himself felt
inclined
to stop at those little places, but, as they were near home, they were always within his reach and they were small, so that there was not room enough for three persons to shoot there.
Levin was so annoyed that he said crossly: 'Something might have been left for me!' and he felt
inclined
to cry.
She had a small travelling looking-glass in her bag, and felt
inclined
to take it out; but glancing at the backs of the coachman and the clerk who sat swaying beside him, she knew she would feel ashamed if one of them chanced to look round, and she did not take it out.
It makes one
inclined
to bet on the result.'
When Katavasov had finished, Levin looked at his watch, saw that it was getting on for two, and thought that there would be no time to read his manuscript to Metrov before the concert, and besides, he no longer felt
inclined
to do so.
She was vexed, not because he displeased her, but because she was not
inclined
to joke.
"If, on the other hand, we do know every living species, we must look for the animal in question among those marine creatures already cataloged, and in this event I would be
inclined
to accept the existence of a giant narwhale.
With reasonable accuracy, they lived up to their nicknames of basket sponges, chalice sponges, distaff sponges, elkhorn sponges, lion's paws, peacock's tails, and Neptune's gloves-- designations bestowed on them by fishermen, more poetically
inclined
than scientists.
He felt dreary as an empty house; and tender memories mingling with the sad thoughts in his brain, addled by the fumes of the feast, he felt
inclined
for a moment to take a turn towards the church.
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