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Inborn   /ˈɪnbˌɔrn/   Listen
Inborn

adjective
1.
Present at birth but not necessarily hereditary; acquired during fetal development.  Synonyms: congenital, innate.
2.
Normally existing at birth.  Synonyms: connatural, inbred.



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"Inborn" Quotes from Famous Books



... in what we call the human element. One remembers their stout hand-grip; they look frankly in one's face, and the heart is apt to go out to them more spontaneously than to the smooth-faced Jacobs. Such a man was Samson, whose hair was his strength,—the strength of inborn truth and goodness, whereby he was enabled to smite the lying Philistines. And although they once, by their sophistries, managed to get the better of him for a while, they forgot that good inborn is too vigorous a matter for any mere razor finally to subdue. ...
— Idolatry - A Romance • Julian Hawthorne

... to wait. As she said, Captain Keith was one of those inborn loiterers who, made punctual by military duty, revenge themselves by double tardiness in the common affairs of life. Impatience had nearly made her revoke her good opinion of him, and augur that, knowing himself vanquished, he had left the field ...
— The Clever Woman of the Family • Charlotte M. Yonge

... her, the inborn powers of Kitty Hartigan bloomed forth. Hers was the gift of sovereignty, and here was the chance to rule. The changes came but slowly at first, till she knew the ground. A broken pane, a weak spot in the roof, a leaky horse trough, and a score of little things were repaired. Account books of a ...
— The Preacher of Cedar Mountain - A Tale of the Open Country • Ernest Thompson Seton

... conformity to an abstract idea, nor conformity to actual reality, nor conformity to the typical, nor conformity to the individual; it is, I take it, simply conformity to man's requirements, to man's inborn and peremptory demand for greater harmony, for more perfect co-ordination and congruity in ...
— Laurus Nobilis - Chapters on Art and Life • Vernon Lee

... has a naked material relation to the other fact, that he uses legal phrases oftener than any other dramatist or poet; but with his plastic power over those grotesque and rugged modes of speech it has nought to do whatever. That was his inborn mastery. Legal phrases did nothing for him; but he much for them. Chance cast their uncouth forms around him, and the golden overflow from the furnace of his glowing thought fell upon them, glorifying and enshielding them ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 4, No. 21, July, 1859 • Various


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