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View definitions for be inclined to think

be inclined to think

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Example Sentences

Because the financing is typically offered through the hospital or doctor’s office, patients may be inclined to think the loans are a good deal.

For example, a reviewer of a funding request might be inclined to think more highly of a researcher from an Ivy League university over one from a historically Black institution.

For example, a reviewer of a funding request might be inclined to think more highly of a researcher from an Ivy League university over one from a historically Black institution.

One might be inclined to think of the New Deal-Civil Rights era, for instance, as nearly a half-century of unbroken progressivism, but it didn’t appear full-blown with the 1932 election and took decades to fully play out.

You lose the snapshot effect so it wouldn’t be good for a horse race vote, especially since the participants would be inclined to think more intently about the election as members of an influential group.

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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