Inborn in a sentence as an adjective

Yeah I've always been tweaked by the "inborn" trait thing.

Calling people nasty names because of those inborn traits is just silly.

"Are you implying that interest in jewelry is inborn in women?

Are you implying that interest in jewelry is inborn in women?

So, yes, let's say determination can matter as much or more than inborn ability.

I completely disagree with the assertion that interface design is an "inborn" trait.

It's fallacious to assume that there are no inborn differences between men and women.

I agree, but I have found that many people here hold the complimentary view: that programming ability is an inborn trait.

Humans seem to have this inborn tendency to always overestimate the effects of medical care.

So what exactly is it supposed to mean to "eliminate a belief" in variation in inborn ability?

Apps and websites that invent their own names for existing concepts and seem to assume that you're silly for not having inborn knowledge of what they mean are frustrating.

In a better world, you might have been teaching an intro to enjoying one's inborn mathematical abilities, with a crack team of TAs from the psychology dept undoing everyone's damage from earlier schooling.

"belief in gift and natural born ability is toxic to all, and by eliminating it, we wont alienate so many from technology"There is certainly some inborn variation between people.

Inborn definitions

adjective

present at birth but not necessarily hereditary; acquired during fetal development

See also: congenital innate

adjective

normally existing at birth; "mankind's connatural sense of the good"

See also: connatural inbred