1. predisposed - Adjective
2. predisposed - Verb
4. predisposed - Adjective Satellite
of Predispose
Source: Webster's dictionaryI don't think Hamlet is mad, nor is he predisposed to be a gloomy or tragic figure. Kenneth Branagh
Despite the myth that men are less committed, they are predisposed to desire marriage. Helen Fisher
Bring together things that have not yet been brought together and did not seem predisposed to be so. Robert Bresson
Alcoholism is a genetically predisposed disease and it does run in my family. I also think I felt like a misfit. I was in the South, everybody was blonde. I just didn't feel like I fitted in. It was sort of my way of fitting. Kristin Davis
The English are predisposed to pride, the French to vanity. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Latins are predisposed to thinking about the past. Catholicism has a lot to do with it because Catholicism is a contemplation of the past, of symbols that are supposed to be eternally present. Oscar Hijuelos