1. disinclined - Adjective
2. disinclined - Verb
of Disincline
Source: Webster's dictionarydisinclined to say anything to anybody Source: Internet
However, he had lost face as a result of the Midway defeat and the Naval General Staff were disinclined to indulge in further gambles. Source: Internet
For their part, Britain and France -- who had been forced in the war's latter stages to divert their own troops to the Italian front to stave off collapse -- were disinclined to support Italy's position at the peace conference. Source: Internet
The PUP could be a home for social democrats but unionists are disinclined to vote for a party with historical connections to para-militarism. Source: Internet
She managed to speak to the Liberal Party leader, Henry Campbell-Bannerman who professed to be suitably outraged but was disinclined to press the matter, as his party was split between the imperialists and the pro-Boer factions. Source: Internet
Disillusionment has set in among the youth here who are hard-pressed to find jobs in offices and factories and are disinclined to toil in the fields like their parents, the traditional vote bank of Congress. Source: Internet