1[transitiveT] formalEFFECT/INFLUENCE if a situation, fact etc inclines you to do or think something, it influences you towards a particular action or opinion 使倾向于〔某种行动或观点〕
incline somebody to do something
The accident inclined him to reconsider his career.
这次意外使他重新考虑他的职业。
2[intransitiveI] formal to think that a particular belief or opinion is most likely to be correct 倾向于〔认为某个信念或观点是正确的〕
incline to do something
I incline to accept the official version of events.
我倾向于接受官方对这些事件的说法。
incline to/towards
I incline to the opinion that this principle extends to cases of religious discrimination.
我倾向于认为这一原则也适用于宗教歧视的情况。
3[intransitiveI, transitiveT] to slope at a particular angle, or to make something do this(使)有斜度,(使)倾斜
The telescope is inclined at an angle of 43 degrees.
这架望远镜以43度角倾斜。
4.incline your headto bend your neck so that your head is lowered 点头
Examples from the Corpus
incline your head• She saw me looking at her and beckoned me, crooking her finger and inclining her head backwards, indicating the verandah.• Urquhart inclined his head and seemed to listen to the wind.• He inclined his head slightly and tried to see up the stairs.• He listens, and sometimes he inclines his head sympathetically, as if to get a better purchase on what I am saying.
incline• Nor can I take an incline railcar up Schlossberg mountain for a panoramic view.• The tide of red taillights ahead of them ran under an overpass and turned up an incline.• This stretch of approximately three miles includes the whole of the famous 1:29 Golfa incline.• This was an area of sloping fields and the trackmounted a gradualincline.• The council houses followed the curve of the road, which wound up a slightincline.• After that I could never see the point of toiling up a steepincline in preference to riding comfortably on a ski-lift!
Originincline1
(1300-1400)Frenchincliner, from Latinclinare“to lean”