Inclination in a sentence as a noun

At best it engages my natural inclination to nit-pick.

And this is just something I saw personally; my inclination is, **** like this happens.

There is no inclination to work together, only standing around and yelling at each other.

I wonder how many HN folk's first inclination would have been to create a website to do this instead of rent a van and deal directly with people?

Baughn also had to suffer a lot of annoyances because I have no inclination toward things like version control.

They’ve done all things, often beautiful things in\n a context that was already set out before them, which they had no\n inclination to disturb.

And I likely wouldn't be hired even if I pretended to ignore that feeling, as I don't feel any inclination to fake interviews any more.

I don't care or anything, but for your benefit: this is a nerdly inclination that will serve you very, very poorly in your professional career.

A number of people reading this will find a strong emotional inclination to leap to the conclusion that this post is pro-nuclear-war advocacy or something.

He asks, however, whether his maxim of neglect of his natural gifts, besides agreeing with his inclination to indulgence, agrees also with what is called duty.

As others have indicated, the limiting factor isn't so much speed of delivery as the inclination to physically inspect items before buying them.

It isn't a particular fault of programmers or educators - this is natural inclination of all of us to deny others the painful experience of learning from mistakes.

These are "skills" that are in no way related to programming, and do not explain an inclination towards CS rather than any other science or the myriad of other academic disciplines.

I definitely believe he would have had the time and inclination to do better for the third world in his later years after leading success to Apple if he had survived his totally unfortunate cancer that cut his life short.

Suddenly CoffeeScript makes a lot more sense to me:"the language itself is held hostage by browser vendors, some of whom have shown a strong inclination to not give a **** about owning up to and fixing their egregious mistakes"So true.

The section in italics was strangely omitted by Stanovich:"He has neither the inclination nor the ability to make sophisticated judgments about competing approaches to construing the Constitution.

Inclination definitions

noun

an attitude of mind especially one that favors one alternative over others; "he had an inclination to give up too easily"; "a tendency to be too strict"

See also: disposition tendency

noun

(astronomy) the angle between the plane of the orbit and the plane of the ecliptic stated in degrees

noun

(geometry) the angle formed by the x-axis and a given line (measured counterclockwise from the positive half of the x-axis)

noun

(physics) the angle that a magnetic needle makes with the plane of the horizon

noun

that toward which you are inclined to feel a liking; "her inclination is for classical music"

noun

the property possessed by a line or surface that departs from the vertical; "the tower had a pronounced tilt"; "the ship developed a list to starboard"; "he walked with a heavy inclination to the right"

See also: tilt list lean leaning

noun

a characteristic likelihood of or natural disposition toward a certain condition or character or effect; "the alkaline inclination of the local waters"; "fabric with a tendency to shrink"

See also: tendency

noun

the act of inclining; bending forward; "an inclination of his head indicated his agreement"

See also: inclining