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12 Sentences With "feels inclined to"

How to use feels inclined to in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "feels inclined to" and check conjugation/comparative form for "feels inclined to". Mastering all the usages of "feels inclined to" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"One feels inclined to identify with the work as if it is a living thing," commented one observer.
Rising sales and profitability suggest the country's growing middle class still feels inclined to spend despite the trade war and other problems.
But you'll also have to do a convincing enough job that the public feels inclined to vote to keep you on the island.
President Trump might want to think long and hard the next time he feels inclined to delete a tweet — because he might be breaking the law.
A Florida-based driver said he's worried about contracting the illness and feels inclined to drop packages on the ground and back away when customers approach him.
As NBC noted, Trump has the power to simply grant whoever he wants a clearance anyhow, and if any president feels inclined to overrule the best advice available to him it's this one.
Of course, Everything and its 10-minute gameplay trailer (up top) won't win a Best Picture Academy Award (aside from any kind of La La Land, Golden Globes mix-up joke someone feels inclined to make).
Arlott listed his main qualities as sound defence, powerful offside driving and "arguably the best hooker of his age". But above all, says Arlott, Sutcliffe was "cool, beyond disturbance, the master of survival and the ultimate pragmatist of cricket".Arlott, Portrait of the Master, p.96. Douglas Jardine touched on this point when, describing Sutcliffe's tiredness at the end of the bodyline series, he added that he "feels inclined to think that Sutcliffe rather enjoys appearing to be in difficulties: he so rarely fails to surmount them".Jardine, p.139.
She is a freshman, two years below the other light music club members. She is currently working in the Kotobuki household as a maid and originally came to the light music room to try to retrieve Tsumugi's teaset that was left behind after she graduated. After being scared off a few times by Sawako, she eventually agrees to join the light music club and eventually becomes its drummer. Similar to Tsumugi, she is quite talented at preparing tea, but feels inclined to keep her role as a maid a secret from the others due to the fear of being punished by Tsumugi.
After attending a showing of a freak show known as "Cirque du Freak", a boy named Darren Shan feels inclined to steal a large tarantula from the spider-tamer and revealed vampire, Larten Crepsley. He learns how to control her through telepathy, but while practicing with his best friend, Steve Leonard, the spider is startled and bites Steve's neck. Though the bite doesn't kill him, Steve is left paralyzed and Darren seeks out Crepsely for an antidote. Crepsley agrees to give it to him, on the condition that Darren becomes a vampire; Darren accepts, and is turned into a half-vampire, and Steve is healed.
The story is told by Max Morden, a self-aware, retired art historian attempting to reconcile himself to the deaths of those he loved as a child and as an adult. The novel is written as a reflective journal; the setting always in flux, wholly dependent upon the topic or theme Max feels inclined to write about. Despite the constant fluctuations, Max returns to three settings: his childhood memories of the Graces--a wealthy middle-class family living in a rented cottage home, the "Cedars"--during the summer holidays; the months leading up to the death of his wife, Anna; and his present stay at the Cedars cottage home in Ballyless--where he has retreated since Anna's death. These three settings are heavily diced and jumbled together for the novel's entire duration.
King often notes Roland's strong sense of romance in his narrations, but describes this aspect of the gunslinger's character as being usually hidden by his more dominant sense of pragmatism. Roland is also shown to care a great deal for his Ka-Tet, or "Companions in fate", and often puts himself at risk to save or assist them. When confronted with the choice between saving one of them or getting one step closer to the fabled Dark Tower of legend, Roland often, but not always, feels inclined to choose the Tower; however, many members of his Ka-Tets, both old and new, make the choice for him, suggesting the enormity of his quest. Roland carries a pair of revolvers, sometimes referred to as "the big guns" by other characters.

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