It is true that the more the nervous function is perfected, the more must the functions required to maintain it develop, and the more exacting, consequently, they become for themselves.
The study of one of these organisms therefore takes us round in a circle, as if everything was a means to everything else.
But the word, by covering up this object, again converts it into a thing.
Patience seems to be prudence in this case; to indispose them, would do no good, and might do harm.
We have hitherto been in hopes that the desperate state of the finances of France and England would indispose those powers to war, and induce them, by an armed mediation, to quiet the affairs of Holland.
Is it true that these deformities, these warped, impaired, and dislocated constitutions indispose men to belief?
Its tendency was to produce in the minds of Gypsies, disaffection to the state, and to indispose others from aiding in the execution of the edict.
Must not the torrent of invective and abuse, almost universally poured upon this people, tend to disaffect and indispose them to civil association!
It is not now true that either climate or the habits of her people indispose them to manufactures.
Producing in abundance the material we chiefly require, their climate and the habits of the people indispose them to manufactures, and leave to be purchased precisely the commodities we have to sell.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "indispose" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.