Well-disposed in a sentence as an adjective

I was well-disposed because I figured it was a YC startup.

The charity of well-disposed people, indeed, supplies him with the whole fund of his subsistence.

Are they going to be especially well-disposed to your brand, or are they going to be filled with determined hatred for you?

Law never made men a whit more just; and, by means of their respect for it, even the well-disposed are daily made the agents of injustice.

"Anyone's friend in particular, or just generally well-disposed to people?

Not well-disposed toward humans, elves, hobbitses and others who cut down trees means evil?That's a bit too Manichaean for me.

Especially when it comes to recognizing images, which machine learning is well-disposed for.

If you end up with a dog it will also improve your social life - people are well-disposed to the owner of a happy dog, and it also makes small talk much easier.

They are trying to force people to trust everyone equally or to feel equally well-disposed toward all potential renters, as a condition for using their service.

And I feel well-disposed towards those advertisers, whereas intrusive advertisers go on my mental blacklist and I select against their offerings when I go shopping.

Possibly because the legal industry hadn't yet become commoditized or otherwise widely available or well-disposed to the people getting their arms ripped off in such a way as meant that they could sue the pants off factory owners that failed in their reasonable duty of care.

Erasmus of Rotterdam and other humanists, Protestant and Catholic, had also chastised practitioners of the art of memory for making extravagant claims for its efficacy, although they themselves believed firmly in a well-disposed, orderly memory as an essential tool of productive thought.>One explanation for the steady decline in the importance of the art of memory from the 16th to the 20th century is offered by the late Ioan P. Culianu, who argued that it was suppressed during the Reformation and Counter-Reformation when Protestants and reactionary Catholics alike worked to eradicate pagan influence and the lush visual imagery of the Renaissance.>Whatever the causes, in keeping with general developments, the art of memory eventually came to be defined primarily as a part of Dialectics, and was assimilated in the 17th century by Francis Bacon and René Descartes into the curriculum of Logic, where it survives to this day as a necessary foundation for the teaching of Argument.

Well-disposed definitions

adjective

inclined to help or support; not antagonistic or hostile; "a government friendly to our interests"; "an amicable agreement"

See also: friendly favorable