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View synonyms for proclivity

proclivity

[ proh-kliv-i-tee ]

noun

, plural pro·cliv·i·ties.
  1. natural or habitual inclination or tendency; propensity; predisposition:

    a proclivity to meticulousness.

    Synonyms: disposition, leaning, bent

    Antonyms: aversion



proclivity

/ prəˈklɪvɪtɪ /

noun

  1. a tendency or inclination


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Word History and Origins

Origin of proclivity1

1585–95; < Latin prōclīvitās tendency, literally, a steep descent, steepness, equivalent to prōclīv ( is ) sloping forward, steep ( prō- pro- 1 + clīv ( us ) slope + -is adj. suffix) + -itās -ity

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Word History and Origins

Origin of proclivity1

C16: from Latin prōclīvitās, from prōclīvis steep, from pro- 1+ clīvus a slope

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Compare Meanings

How does proclivity compare to similar and commonly confused words? Explore the most common comparisons:

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Example Sentences

During our own analysis of Search Engine Land titles that changed in the search results, we also noticed that Google had a proclivity for removing the pipe character.

Importantly, the platform’s proclivity for inspiration results in bigger shopping carts and upsells.

From Digiday

That’s not a function of gerrymandering, that is a function of the number of people there, their partisan proclivities, as opposed to what you are going to see in Ohio, Texas, Georgia, regardless of what voters want.

Possibly, although that seems unlikely given the proclivities of all the parties involved.

It was overkill for a one-night trip, but I hoped that obsessive preparation could tamp down my proclivity for imagining worst-case scenarios.

But however laughable our proclivity for questions, doubt, and endless theorizing, it is just as equally inevitable.

When it comes time to write about his proclivity toward violence, I have all of these testimonies, filed in the same place.

Nowhere is that proclivity more in evidence than in immigration policy.

Two profilers labeled Karr/Reich as a man with a "definite proclivity toward pedophilia."

It is asserted that she had had, all her life, an avowed proclivity to suicide.

Yet before he took this step he was accused of a proclivity toward extraordinary things.

And as we know Don Benigno's proclivity in this direction, the shaft went home with diabolical effect.

And there is, in many French poets, a fatal proclivity to fuss just a little too much over their subjects.

The frog has a proclivity for squeezing into holes and cracks, or beneath objects on the ground.

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