All 16 Uses of
inclined
in
The Fountainhead
- He had never shown any inclination to do so.†
Chpt 1.1 *
- Roark inclined his head in agreement; he could acknowledge what Cameron had just declared to him only by a quiet glance as solemn as Cameron's.†
Chpt 1.14
- He did not answer, but inclined his head and walked on up the stairs toward her.†
Chpt 2.2
- She inclined her head, he saw her lashes touching her cheeks for an instant as her eyes closed, and then she looked at him again.†
Chpt 2.5
- I'm inclined to agree with Euclid, I don't think these two parallels will ever meet.†
Chpt 2.7
- But Roark said nothing; he had merely inclined his head when he heard the decision.†
Chpt 2.7
- The minister was inclined to agree with her.†
Chpt 2.9
- Dealing with art as much as I do, I'm inclined to see things purely from the viewpoint of artistic fitness.†
Chpt 2.11
- She inclined her head to the judge.†
Chpt 2.12
- She inclined her head gravely in acquiescence.†
Chpt 2.14
- He did nothing spectacular; his voice was low, metallic, inclined to sound monotonous; he was too correct, in a manner that was almost deliberate satire on correctness.†
Chpt 3.1
- She inclined her head in agreement.†
Chpt 3.3
- He inclined his head gravely, acknowledging the authorship, and said nothing else.†
Chpt 3.8
- Howard Roark inclined his head, in acknowledgment.†
Chpt 4.1
- "Gail Wynand," he said, inclining his head in self-introduction.†
Chpt 4.4
- Roark got up and inclined his head in parting.†
Chpt 4.19
Definition:
-
(inclined as in: I'm inclined to) a tendency, mood, desire, or attitude that favors something; or making someone favor something