Synonym: predilection, preference, taste. Similar words: trenchant, nonchalant, unchangeable, merchant, bench, quench, in charge, French. Meaning: ['pɒ̃ːŋʃɒ̃ːŋ] n. a strong liking.
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31) Otaka's penchant is for the post-Wagnerian Romantics, particularly Strauss, three of whose works he conducted.
32) These two raccoon-eyed psychos have lost none of their no-holds-barred energy or their penchant for writing catchy melodies.
33) And, like an Edgar Allan Poe character, he harbors a penchant for graveyards, caskets and moldy cellars. Sentencedict.com
34) He was a slow-talking Mississippian with a penchant for the rustic turn of phrase and a gift for storytelling.
35) There is a cultural element penchant for mismanaging crisis.
36) He had a penchant for playing jokes on people.
37) The Irish have a penchant for blarney.
38) He seems to have a penchant for my children.
39) He could be timeconsuming with his penchant for anecdotes.
40) The appeal of the Duchess of Cambridge, a photogenic pin-up with a well-judged penchant for British designers.
41) Combine this with C's penchant for short, cryptic variable names, and you have a recipe for disaster.
42) But in Taiwan, financial services remain hamstrung, thanks to the government's penchant for interfering with banks.
43) Prosecution lawyers claim he has a penchant for guns and violence towards women who spurned him.
44) A pirate and smuggler, Baba was an obnoxious miscreant with a penchant for fisticuffs.
45) Nor does the island's penchant for equality stop at work - sharing.
46) As dismaying as the psychotic penchant for very small dogs is, a coming penchant for very small robot dogs will be even worse.
47) The stability of the Ukrainian hryvnia, the ill-regulated Kazakh banking system, and Hungarian borrowers' penchant for loans in Swiss francs are subjects crowding on to policymakers' desks.
48) Then along comes Russian soprano Anna Netrebko—knockout good looks, bewitching charm and a mesmerizing hold on the media, which tirelessly chronicle her penchant for partying and haute couture.
49) One of his seminal articles in this period was published in a book in honor of Mises — that supposedly washed-up old man who just so happened to have a penchant for speaking truth to power.
50) Mrs Clinton's penchant for spicy food is reportedly so notorious that flight stewards bring jalapeno slices to her with every dish.
51) While some people have a natural penchant for all things dramatic, including giving notice, many of these over-the-top resignations come from frustrated workers who've reached a boiling point.
52) Status Offline As dismaying as the psychotic penchant for very small dogs is, a coming penchant for very small robot dogs will be even worse.
53) When Homo sapiens evolved onthe African Savannah, the ones a penchant for trying new horizonsprospered.
54) Like America, China can still display a penchant for unilateralism that undermines all its careful diplomacy.
55) Despite her penchant for chitchat , Yvonne was no birdbrain, Martin discovered.
56) It was this performance, not his penchant for haiku poetry, that impressed other EU leaders.
57) On the other hand, David also a penchant for bright pink nails.
58) Blake will give them a steady floor leader off the bench with a penchant for hitting key three-pointers in the fourth quarter.
59) Though philosophers have a natural penchant for being , Absolutists when they write about education, it is surprisingly hard to find good examples of this position—was Plato an Absolutist?
60) Despite a penchant for contagious geometric patterns, Mr Orozco does not have an identifiable signature style.
More similar words: trenchant, nonchalant, unchangeable, merchant, bench, quench, in charge, French, drench, wrench, quenched, in charge of, chance, change, pencil, channel, mechanic, exchange, by chance, changing, mechanism, penitence, pencil box, mechanical, changeable, take a chance, in exchange for, elephant, independence, hand in hand.