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innately

[ US /ˌɪˈneɪtɫi/ ]
[ UK /ɪnnˈe‍ɪtli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in an innate manner
    the child is said to be innately disposed to learn language

How To Use innately In A Sentence

  • Though he studied electronics, he was an innately creative artist, even as a child.
  • Racism is the belief that one race is innately superior to another.
  • The upright stems have many, alternate, pinnately compound leaves with sharply toothed or lacerate leaflets.
  • The troops kind of innately believe that what they're doing is important, but in truth to tell, they're not really certain why. CNN Transcript Dec 2, 2003
  • If men in these communities have used clan names to anchor fixed notions of self in a politically territorialized landscape, women's names and naming stories map female identities as innately ambiguous, stubbornly diverse, and infinitely adaptable. Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
  • He believes that humans are innately violent.
  • Woman is either ignored or presented as innately less aggressive than man.
  • But she knew that he was too innately untrustful, unloving, to be saved by an act of faith. Captivity
  • They are pinnately trifoliate and the terminal leaflet is often the largest. Chapter 8
  • Anglos considered Mexicans an innately lazy and unenterprising people who had failed to exploit the rich natural resources of the Southwest.
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