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be inclined to think
verb as in assume
Strongest matches
Strong matches
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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