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16 Sentences With "incline toward"

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

We naturally incline toward interpreting events and ascribing significance to them.
Already secular or indifferent believers are unlikely to incline toward one or the other group.
Some people feel their best eating vegan, some naturally incline toward a Mediterranean diet, and others literally hate all fruit.
From my kitchen window, I watched as people made their way up the steep incline toward the caves in the cliff.
From my kitchen window, I watched as people made their way up the steep incline toward the caves in the cliff.
This is the swagger that pulls other celebrities who incline toward the provocative—Lady Gaga, Kim Kardashian, Kanye West, Riccardo Tisci, James Franco—into her orbit.
In that position, he holds his lute vertically aloft, while the muses, around him in a ring, incline toward him, like birds drinking from a pool.
But his music could also incline toward lyricism, and it eventually came to be so highly regarded that Mr. Davies was celebrated as one of the most eminent postwar composers in the world.
Buyers who like historic details may incline toward the unit, one of 20 in a walk-up brick building completed in about 1921 by Finnish developers who constructed several co-ops in the area.
Mr. Rau's world of European theater — highly intellectual and restrained — and that of Mosul, where acting styles incline toward melodrama, often seemed far from each other, but then would unexpectedly click, finding an exhilarating synergy.
As Paul Lambert explained, Smart Compose could create a mathematical representation of each user's unique writing style, based on all the e-mails she has written, and have the A.I. incline toward that style in making suggestions.
In the 23s, mathematicians showed that almost all Collatz sequences—the list of numbers you get as you repeat the process—eventually reach a number that's smaller than where you started—weak evidence, but evidence nonetheless, that almost all Collatz sequences incline toward 299.
There is a sulfurous smell that grows stronger as we walk down the slight incline toward the deepest point of our day, more than 4,20103 feet below the surface, and duck under the first of the hydraulic presses that keep the ceiling from collapsing on us.
Four conservative justices are expected to incline toward Jack Phillips, a Christian baker who declines to create cakes for wedding ceremonies he considers sacrilegious; four liberal justices will probably favour the right of Charlie Craig and David Mullins, under Colorado's public-accommodations law, to be treated equally in the marketplace.
The bay extends from Cape Ann on the north to Plymouth Harbor on the south, a distance of about . Its northern and southern shores incline toward each other through the entrance to Boston Harbor, where they are about five miles apart. The depth from the base of the triangle to Boston Harbor is about . The westmost point of the bay is at the city of Boston.
265 In 2004, Stephen Schlesinger wrote, "Among historians, the verdict about White is still unresolved, but many incline toward the view that he wanted to help the Russians but did not regard the actions he took as constituting espionage." In 2012, Bruce Craig wrote: > Taken individually, one could argue that some of the documents indicate that > White may have not always have been aware that his information was being > passed on to Moscow, but taken collectively, [Andrew] Vassiliev's > documentation leaves little wiggle room for White's defenders to continue to > assert that he was not involved in an activity that, at least by present day > legal standards, constitute espionage. In 2012, David Chambers wrote, "Perhaps White had ends of his own, too... Perhaps he used his position to foster the Soviet Union — then a new, budding American ally, recognized only in 1933 — beyond New Deal policy." In 2013, Benn Steil wrote: > White almost certainly, and over many years, gave confidential and > classified U.S. government information–in original, transcribed, and oral > form–to individuals whom he knew would ultimately transmit it to the Soviet > government ... Yet the economics White advocated were hardly Marxist.

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