Kinship in a sentence as a noun

"I confess to feeling some kinship with Snowden.

Lesson learned: if love is strong, kinship bonds are often stronger.

For one, donors are likely to already be fans of the artist and feel a sort of kinship with them.

I hung out with the freaks, and goths, and stoners, because as fellow outsiders, I felt the most kinship with them.

People that have mutual kinship can improve their position with people with similar interests.

Im assuming that for some reason you and I don't know, there is a particular connection or kinship of some sort.

This place isn't a real-life place, so naturally, that kinship might not develop as quickly, or spread as deeply as one might in person.

Congrats!Part of being in a community is that it's pretty common to have a kinship with other people in that community.

Because in the world I live in, kinship and economic institutions are horrifically dysfunctional.

This represents a broad definition that is not in any way adversarial to the importance of kinship selection for social evolution.

So people two generations apart in the same family have completely different names, and non-siblings having the same patronymic isn't an indicator of kinship.

In evolutionary biology this is referred to as "kinship".Not to say that racism isn't worth fighting against, but the more free our societies become the more people on average will follow their natural instincts.

Kinship definitions

noun

a close connection marked by community of interests or similarity in nature or character; "found a natural affinity with the immigrants"; "felt a deep kinship with the other students"; "anthropology's kinship with the humanities"

See also: affinity

noun

(anthropology) relatedness or connection by blood or marriage or adoption

See also: relationship