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proneness

[ UK /pɹˈə‍ʊnnəs/ ]
NOUN
  1. being disposed to do something
    accident proneness

How To Use proneness In A Sentence

  • At least 3 users certificates to attached in each offer as a testimony to proneness.
  • In a fascinating long-term study, Ms. Tangney and Ms. Dearing assessed shame-proneness in 380 fifth-graders and then followed up years later. What a Shame That Guilt Got a Bad Name
  • accident proneness
  • If fallen man’s wounded and conflictful nature explains his proneness to ordinary wrong-doing, how much more readily does it account for his proneness to sin. The Angels and Us
  • The generalisations of philosophy go to improve our methods so that we may have greater proneness for sense of delight and greater possibility for sense delight. The Kempton-Wace Letters
  • His original sin, therefore, cannot be like ordinary human sinning, the result of a proneness to sin that is inherent in a conflictful nature. The Angels and Us
  • For instance, a study by McGee and Newcomb provided consistent findings for problem behavior proneness across four developmental stages from early adolescence to adulthood.
  • And I know others, others in the SAME FAMILY, who are convinced that those spankings (from the same adults) made a significant dent in their self-esteem, ability to trust, proneness to shame, and so on. A Spanking A Day Keeps Failure Away? | Her Bad Mother
  • But Silas chose the factual scheme of death, a choice given to the alternately calming and brutal representations of death relative to the viewer's proneness to emotional and aesthetic delicacy. G. Roger Denson: Holocaust and Redemption in the Photography of Susan Silas
  • Absorption is a personality trait associated with fantasy proneness, vivid imagery and so forth.
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