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    In·cline

    verb

    • 1. feel willing or favorably disposed toward (an action, belief, or attitude): "he was inclined to accept the offer"
    • 2. have a tendency to do something: "she's inclined to gossip with complete strangers"

    noun

    • 1. an inclined surface or plane; a slope, especially on a road or railway: "the road climbs a long incline through a forest"
  2. incline. [intransitive, transitive] to tend to think or behave in a particular way; to make somebody do this. incline to/towards something I incline to the view that we should take no action at this stage. Young people incline towards individualistic behaviour.

  3. INCLINE meaning: 1. to (make someone) feel something or want to do something: 2. to (cause to) slope at a…. Learn more.

  4. 1. /ɪnˈklaɪn/ lower or bend, as in a nod or bow. 2. /ˈɪnklaɪn/ a sloping surface connecting two levels. IPA guide. Other forms: inclined; inclining; inclines. Something that slopes — that is, something that deviates from the straight horizontal or vertical — can be called an incline.

  5. incline. verb. /ɪnˈklaɪn/ Verb Forms. [intransitive, transitive] (formal) to tend to think or behave in a particular way; to make someone do this incline to/toward something I incline to the view that we should take no action at this stage.

  6. Meaning of incline – Learner’s Dictionary. incline. verb [ T ] formal uk / ɪnˈklaɪn / us. Add to word list. If you incline your head, you bend your neck so that your face bends down. Phrasal verbs. incline to/towards sth. noun [ C ] formal uk / ˈɪnklaɪn / us. a slope: a steep / gentle incline.

  7. 5 days ago · incline in British English. verb (ɪnˈklaɪn ) 1. to deviate or cause to deviate from a particular plane, esp a vertical or horizontal plane; slope or slant. 2. (when tr, may take an infinitive) to be disposed or cause to be disposed (towards some attitude or to do something) he inclines towards levity.

  8. 1. To be disposed to a certain preference, opinion, or course of action: Some researchers incline toward a different view of the problem. 2. To deviate from the horizontal or vertical; slant: When the path inclined steeply, it became difficult to continue hiking. 3. To lower or bend the head or body, as in a nod or bow. n. (ĭn′klīn′)

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