Synonym: flat, horizontal, inclined, level, liable, prostrate, ready, willing. Antonym: supine. Similar words: pronounce, pronunciation, environmental protection, iron, rondo, wrong, irony, bear on. Meaning: [prəʊn] adj. 1. lying face downward 2. having a tendency (to); often used in combination.
Random good picture Not show
61. Pedantic people are prone to do this with minor typing errors or spelling mistakes.
62. For example, Monday clinics are prone to develop a backlog owing to bank holidays and statutory holidays.
63. Every believer is prone to doubt, but some are more prone to one kind and some to another.
64. The replacement of surface skin cells slows down, and they tend to become more prone to environmental damage.
65. The Lonely Hearts are the most frequent masturbators of our sample and prone to fantasize.
66. I should like to know whether there are any occupational diseases to which hackers are prone.
67. Agribusiness that operates in sectors marked by seasonal fluctuations has been prone to this sort of employment.
68. And character recognition is relatively slow and prone to errors even on powerful computers.
69. He is hardly a sentimental sap who is prone to vicarious patriotism.
70. Mosley too became increasingly prone to blur the distinction between art, philosophy and life.
70. Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
71. In houses particularly prone to condensation, you can cover walls with a thin layer of polystyrene before applying wallpaper.
72. Addictive behaviour is used just as addictive substances are used by people who are prone to addictive disease.
73. The Tube is also prone to suffer from condensation due to its shape.
74. McCain imagines that if they sit around watching more wholesome television, they will be less prone to delinquency.
75. For example, birds have higher maximum lifespans than mammals and are less prone to death in the wild.
76. When this happens, you may be prone to chilblains and other circulatory problems.
77. They may be prone to arguments and quarrel over any imagined offence.
78. Studies are under way to find out why men of some races are more prone to some forms of cancer than others.
79. A character who is held fast can not move or fight, and is treated as prone.
80. They are also more prone to profess unhappiness than divorced women.
81. You're also prone to dredging up the wounding words and cutting critiques others have directed at you recently.
82. Those who appear before the AFl-CIO are prone to identify social progress with a strong trade union movement.
83. He was a strange man, prone to melancholy and bouts of drinking.
84. Where she was concerned, he was too prone to condemn.
85. In this way you can hook the oedematous scrotum and winch it up with the anaesthetised patient prone.
86. They tend to get disorganized as the mania increases, and even more prone to poor judgment.
87. However, consumer written reviews can often be more anecdotal than scientific, and somewhat prone to rigging.
88. The commission also said Brown is prone to inserting conservative views into opinions.
89. Intel favours using cash rather than stock as such deals are less prone to the stock market volatility.
90. Perhaps it would be wise to pander a little to his whims since it seemed he was prone to these Viking tendencies.
More similar words: pronounce, pronunciation, environmental protection, iron, rondo, wrong, irony, bear on, patron, strong, bronze, chronic, later on, go wrong, cronyism, forefront, border on, erroneous, confront, frontier, agronomy, in front of, ironically, in the front, patronize, astronaut, for one thing, patronage, astronomer, chronology.