Sentences with phrase «often inclined»

Bill Sudlow of Atlanta's Sudlow Concrete has worked in the concrete business for 12 years and is less often inclined to repair a crack in a concrete driveway because of the impossibility of matching new concrete to old.
When they fall short on any of these criteria, we're often inclined to look for someone else whom we hope can meet them — which helps to explain why Americans tend to enter into and exit out of relationships more quickly than anyone else on earth.3
As a result, people are often inclined to accept data and interpretations that appear to validate their prior views.
Too often art historians, critics, and viewers look for the familiar in the art they see, often inclined to make immediate comparisons to other artists or works they have previously witnessed.
A Malamute is often inclined to be very talkative and they will often howl if left alone for too long in the backyard.
Those marketers who aren't receiving responses are often inclined to respond by sending out yet more emails.
«The gift of life, oftentimes so difficult to accept, the horse whose teeth we are so often inclined to inspect.»
If the intended reader of this book should want to go beyond disagreement with its author and try to identify the sins and deformities that animated him to write it (and I have certainly noticed that those who publicly affirm charity and compassion and forgiveness are often inclined to take this course), then he or she will not just be quarreling with the unknowable and ineffable creator who — presumably — opted to make me this way.
When testing is over, schools are often inclined to take students on «reward» field trips to places like amusement parks, bowling alleys, and movie theaters.
If we persevere in the face of skepticism and doubt, as Vilenkin is often inclined to do, interesting and unexpected ideas may well emerge — just like a universe popping out of nowhere.
They are also often inclined towards theocracy, to varying degrees.
If no analogies from past or present experience are available by which to interpret new data, critical consciousness is often inclined to discard, or completely overlook, any true novelty.
Courts are often inclined to find that low - wage workers are employees, even if they have some control.

Not exact matches

Some offer a more fanciful explanation of why those inclined towards math and sciences revere Ultimate, which is often played co-ed.
Firms that are so inclined often create abnormal accruals to just meet or beat analyst forecasts, or avoid reporting losses.
One of the big «Justin - fications» for this proposal is that it'll help parents deal with expensive and hard - to - find childcare, which is often cheaper and easier to find for toddlers (partly because staff - to - child ratios are looser after 18 months, so daycares are less inclined to hire additional staff to accommodate more infants).
Trump often criticized Yellen during the presidential race, telling Fortune during the campaign that «I would be more inclined to put other people» in her position.
Although black consumers spend $ 1.2 trillion every year, companies often underestimate how much their brands depend on black consumers, and are therefore less inclined to reinvest their profits in those communities, explains Evans.
Put simply, when valuation measures are steeply elevated but investors remain inclined to speculate, as evidenced by very broad uniformity of market action and the absence of internal divergences, rich valuations often have little effect on market outcomes.
At least nothing beyond «h - ll», «d-mn», or» - ss»... mostly cause CNN's filters are so strong, and that reporting is so easy, that I'm not really inclined to use «f — k» or «s — t» very often on this site.
It suggests going in as heavily armed as possible, since child soldiers are often more inclined to tackle lightly armed units.
Even people in our churches are often more inclined to form opinions on international matters on the basis of national identity rather than Christian identity, which can never be confined to the boundaries of a nation - state.
Like science, religion is not always (perhaps not even often) inclined to heed this obligation of accommodating itself to the adventure of revision.
We are often even inclined to take our individual experiences of tragedy as the key to the whole universe.
It was often emotionally repressed, inclined to view human loves not as extensions of God's love for us but as rivals of that love.
As I have read and reread the Apologia, however, I have had to face something that even the most dogmatically inclined evangelical often avoids: the historical nature of dogma.
A mother shouldn't have favorites, but I have often observed that she inclines more to the child who is sick or more vulnerable than the rest.
And, surprising to us, old - line Pentecostal groups — those started through missionary activity in the first half of this century — are often not as vital as charismatically inclined churches that were started in the past two decades.
Even those who were inclined to condemn the new liturgical translations out of hand - often the same who muttered about the Pope's visit - have had to concede that there is a majesty in the Eucharistic Prayers which was missing from the former version.
Even those who were inclined to condemn the new liturgical translations out of hand - often the same who muttered about the Pope's...
People often smile when it is said that only love can really see another person as he is; we are inclined to think that love is «blind», failing to see defects and always ready to discover values and virtues.
Had not the gospel writers, particularly Matthew, inserted so often, «that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet,» we might be less inclined to look for exact predictions and be captured rather by the wonder and glory of God's redeeming love which Jesus came to bear.
I am inclined to think that Christians tended to be misled by the anthropomorphic ideas of God with which, quite rightly up to a point, they often operated; and that they found it unnecessarily difficult to think of salvation being effected by the personal Spirit of God reaching out to men in judgment, mercy, forgiveness and love through the medium of a human personality.
They are more inclined to accept explanations from official sources, from «experts,» from company officials, from well prepared hand - outs created by public relations experts, than to go to the trouble to dig out opposing views that often are represented by small, inefficient, underfinanced and even unpopular groups.
It is often reductionistic, since it is strongly inclined to suppose that events at the macro level are ultimately explicable by events at the micro level.
Bereaved fathers, on the other hand, are often more private and less inclined to share about the loss even when solicited.
He wrote and published a Latin piece in Praise of Music: «Music has often stirred me... so that I wanted to preach... Nothing on earth has greater power to make the sad joyful, the joyful sad, the despondent courageous to incline the arrogant to humility and to lessen envy and hatred».
It appears clearly in the touching and beautiful characterization of Pausanias, whom Hoelderlin has depicted as a companion to Empedocles: the only person who is close to the master, to whom the master inclines himself lovingly and trustingly, and yet whom he must so often instruct and correct, who can not understand the highest and final thing — the necessity and the loneliness of the sacrifice.
being allergic to eggs and not inclined to try to make involved breads often this is the answer for wraps, quesadillas, even for enchiladas.
In Indian restaurants, customers have often been inclined toward beer rather than wine.
The spectator, conditioned more to thinking in terms of track, is inclined to wonder why Michigan's coach, Gus Stager, should have a half dozen of his finest swimmers go almost all - out in their heats (trackmen will often coast in their heats).
There are CBs in the league who constantly get away with fouling off the ball knowing that the ref is often not looking or is inclined to view «off the ball» fouls as less significant.
We had to adjust how much he was fed, how often he was burped, his formula brand and type, and have him sleep on an incline (the Dex Baby Safe Crib Wedge worked well for us).
I'm not sure about that saying... I've always been inclined to believe that first impressions are accurate more often than not.
If you are so inclined, you could also make it because often it's just a matter of nailing four pieces of wood together.
I did notice a few bad reviews for the sensor pad on a couple of baby store websites, but again, keep your receipt because as you know often the people who don't like a product are more inclined to leave comments than those who are satisfied.
What seems to be coming up from consumers most often is that the seat isn't upright enough when fully inclined.
Whenever a person is saving money, they are more often than not inclined to keep doing whatever they are doing to save money.
The inclined rockers are more like small rocking chairs and often come equipped with a toy bar and music to encourage sensory stimulation.
Fortunately, knowledge workers often have a commitment to the work itself that makes them inclined toward information sharing.
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