We're very prone to be reactionary… Mr Curtis: Why are we prone to that?
|
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That's right: According to this study, people prone to empathy are prone to schadenfreude.
|
|
It's a chain of islands with low elevations prone to floods or steep mountains prone to landslides.
|
|
"Usually in a couple someone is more prone to saving and one is more prone to spending," she said.
|
|
Concentration and cartelisation make oil prone to crises and the governments of oil-rich states prone to corruption and abuse.
|
|
"Some suggest academics are especially prone to tsundoku—I would suggest digital journalists might be more prone to tab-sundoku," she writes.
|
|
Mr. Biden, prone to wobbly debate performances that have unnerved even the Iowans prone to back him, had his strongest showing yet.
|
|
Another, said Quinn, "is that people who are prone to Parkinson's … might just be less prone to smoke cigarettes as part of their genetic makeup."
|
|
She is prone to wide-eyed expressions of surprise; she is prone to making her mouth as round as her eyes as she listens in awe or surprise or delight.
|
|
But it was a bit dangerous — prone to exploding.
|
|
Bandwagons Every industry is prone to "collective movements" — i.e.
|
|
" Stephens explains Musk "is prone to unhinged Twitter eruptions.
|
|
He argued the latter is prone to fraud. 2.
|
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He may have been seeking in the past the seeds of his own biography, as authors of such volumes are prone to do — as all of us, I suspect, are prone to do.
|
|
Meaning: Some people may just be more prone to it.
|
|
From time immemorial, financial markets have been prone to bubbles.
|
|
When that becomes irrational exuberance they are prone to burst.
|
|
But it's prone to user error, especially on mobile devices.
|
|
But she's prone to hyperbole that gets her in trouble.
|
|
What sort of things are they prone to lie about?
|
|
We also tested it against a complexion prone to redness.
|
|
Wifi can be prone to hiccups, which lead to lag.
|
|
Unfortunately for Wallis, he's also prone to playing the bagpipes.
|
|
Without moderators or fancy algorithms, they are prone to anarchy.
|
|
"I'm very prone to questioning everything I do," she said.
|
|
They are also prone to imposing arbitrary targets and taxes.
|
|
He was not prone to extravagant gestures or loud peroration.
|
|
She's a journalist, after all, prone to chasing the story.
|
|
Individual district polls are of course prone to large errors.
|
|
The region is prone to natural disasters and extreme weather.
|
|
They were also prone to breaking down after repeated viewings.
|
|
What kind of trouble are pets prone to get into?
|
|
They are more prone to complex interactions and emergent effects.
|
|
This suggests he may be prone to such a tactic.
|
|
People will be angry and prone to cutting things off.
|
|
Vietnam's long coastline makes it prone to destructive tropical storms.
|
|
How about a stressed stockbroker prone to sweating under pressure?
|
|
African women are especially prone to putting on extra pounds.
|
|
Emotional eaters are especially prone to binging on Ben & Jerry's.
|
|
He didn't like the cops and wasn't prone to squealing.
|
|
The international system is prone to inertia and turf wars.
|
|
Like most people I'm prone to constantly evaluating my life.
|
|
Poor children are especially prone to being bullied, she says.
|
|
I've been prone to burnout most of my adult life.
|
|
The filing season is also frequently prone to unexpected problems.
|
|
Rick is soft and masochistic, prone to fits of tears.
|
|
But the surgical tubes are also prone to similar problems.
|
|
Legislators are prone to playing games, but Glawe is not.
|
|
The death penalty is too final & too prone to error.
|
|
This was not a man prone to displays of emotion.
|
|
Experts say such field tests are prone to false positives.
|
|
I promptly began to panic — I was prone to seasickness.
|
|
The uniforms were also criticized for being prone to melting.
|
|
And algorithms are, of course, still prone to human bias.
|
|
"It'll help if you're prone to depression too," she says.
|
|
He is prone to delivering wooden speeches in formal Arabic.
|
|
And very prone to pitting women against one another. Exactly.
|
|
"These vehicles are very prone to rollover," Mr. Mack said.
|
|
Likewise, in states more prone to wind-related events — i.e.
|
|
Hot, it tends to be mushy and prone to oozing.
|
|
Additionally, the true crime genre is inescapably prone to subjectivity.
|
|
Service speeds, for example, are cultural, and prone to bias.
|
|
Ms. Bruns had multiple sclerosis and was prone to seizures.
|
|
Like investment strategists, epidemiologists are prone to egregious forecasting errors.
|
|
A: Old lath and plaster walls are prone to cracking.
|
|
She's no longer prone to dewiness; she's fully present onstage.
|
|
Mayor Garcetti isn't the only Californian prone to bro hugs.
|
|
Last season, Simmons was prone to getting into foul trouble.
|
|
They are most prone to depression after such a loss.
|
|
The bends themselves also make curly hair prone to breakage.
|
|
Cramer said Apple is still prone to downgrades by analysts.
|
|
Unfortunately, microscopy requires specialized labor and is prone to error.
|
|
They are historically prone to vastly overestimating and underestimating risk.
|
|
Others are prone to more frequent droughts, desertification and floods.
|
|
He was prone to wearing fake policing gear in public.
|
|
When we're fatigued, we're prone to careless — perhaps dangerous — errors.
|
|
But they are real people, prone to error and misjudgments.
|
|
Of course, Surrealists weren't the only artists prone to fisticuffs.
|
|
Weiss emphasized that while being a member of the LGBT community doesn't automatically make a person more prone to suicide attempts, those who live in an open and tolerant societies are more prone to flourish.
|
|
Was there ever a city of peace so prone to conflict?
|
|
There were many who were prone to vituperative racism and classism.
|
|
The backside, however, is more prone to scratches than the frontside.
|
|
But it was dryer and seemed slightly more prone to pimples.
|
|
Those prone to vertigo should be ready to cover their eyes.
|
|
Viewers prone to vertigo should be ready to cover their eyes.
|
|
This show is prone to hyperbole (looking at you, Chris Harrison).
|
|
It's slippery, and prone to collecting an unsightly amount of fingerprints.
|
|
Miocic's right hand is still prone to both dangling and reaching.
|
|
Both men are prickly, imperious and prone to spreading conspiracy theories.
|
|
But this leaves us prone to being wrong-footed every time.
|
|
Tristan has suffered from PTSD and is prone to emotional outbursts.
|
|
Unlike the Dardennes, Lapid's direction is prone to flights of fancy.
|
|
But humans are curious, covetous and prone to disregard terrible odds.
|
|
Why doesn't Pakistan make its blasphemy laws less prone to abuse?
|
|
It's very effective for children prone to panic attacks or tantrums.
|
|
Their lack of flexibility makes them brittle and prone to damage.
|
|
In Africa children and pregnant women are especially prone to malaria.
|
|
Stone, prone to conspiracy theories, has a history in controversial elections.
|
|
But they're prone to moving around and are not really stable.
|
|
He was arrogant, prone to trouble, but had a spindly frame.
|
|
So most services companies are less prone to an inventory cycle.
|
|
And I think Donald Trump is certainly prone to embracing [them].
|
|
Those who recover from the virus may be prone to relapse.
|
|
But there is something odd: it's prone to misreading my fingerprint.
|
|
A lack of external pressure makes Welsh Labour prone to infighting.
|
|
He was also prone to jealous rages that often turned violent.
|
|
The problem, however, is that they're unstable and prone to leaks.
|
|
But as we age, we're more prone to developing health issues.
|
|
Moreover, the system is prone to leaks, theft, misuse and overuse.
|
|
His mental health has suffered and he is prone to seizures.
|
|
The tablet feels plasticky, and the screen is prone to scuffs.
|
|
You can see the top is prone to fingerprints and scratching.
|
|
There's this long history of viewing women as prone to hysteria.
|
|
It's simply too inefficient and error prone to make it worthwhile.
|
|
Much of the language is ambiguous and prone to diverging interpretations.
|
|
"Those with deeper pockets are more prone to wait," she said.
|
|
Of course, these are prone to spilling out into public walkways.
|
|
Watch It If: You're prone to reminiscing about your first love.
|
|
Less likely to break on impact but more prone to abrasion.
|
|
Both are prone to abuse, and to chilling of legitimate speech.
|
|
Like any second date, people are prone to anxiety in anticipation.
|
|
But politicians have long been prone to ignore this essential wisdom.
|
|
He thought that the tours were okay, but prone to misinformation.
|
|
They're expensive, old, prone to failure, and unpleasant to look at.
|
|
Still, it's a speculative asset and prone to dramatic price swings.
|
|
By "better," we mean faster, more efficient, less prone to error.
|
|
Kyrgios was also prone to inexplicable meltdowns and moments of rebellion.
|
|
But it's in an area prone to wildfires and possible earthquakes.
|
|
He's also prone to talking to Issa with his shirt off.
|
|
Mason: As we age, we become more prone to getting osteoporosis.
|
|
The tech is more expensive and more prone to failing miserably.
|
|
Abused children are prone to abusing others when they grow up.
|
|
Once you selfie, are you prone to selfie-ing more often?
|
|
Antidepressants are particularly prone to this phenomenon. Nausea. Diarrhea. Constipation. Headaches.
|
|
Different ethnicities are more prone to this gene mutation than others.
|
|
Chinese machinery is cheaper but more prone to breakdowns, he says.
|
|
Strangely, however, elephants aren't more prone to cancer than smaller animals.
|
|
Aid agencies express caution as the island is prone to flooding.
|
|
I don't know if they're more prone to mental health problems.
|
|
He was argumentative and prone to tangents and non-responsive answers.
|
|
Silvie knows from bruising experience that he is prone to brutality.
|
|
Radio tracker bracelets protect children who might be prone to wander.
|
|
Children who are exposed to lead are prone to learning disabilities.
|
|
Always talented, Sellers was prone to illness and injury in college.
|
|
And of those, 13 million are considered highly prone to wildfire.
|
|
It is an art prone to accident, especially during kiln firings.
|
|
"Research shows that humans are prone to loss aversion," she explains.
|
|
Not every region is prone to the same types of disasters.
|
|
The onslaught already makes the camps prone to outbreaks of disease.
|
|
But what cities are most prone to so-called porch pirates?
|
|
Bret Stephens Opinion Columnist He is prone to unhinged Twitter eruptions.
|
|
This is not a man prone to introspection or self-critique.
|
|
Camila Mendes isn't prone to drastic changes in her beauty routine.
|
|
They weren't people you would think as prone to addictive tendencies.
|
|
Children with autism are often prone to wandering or bolting away.
|
|
The technology can be useful, but it's also prone to errors.
|
|
That means they're prone to misunderstanding the stuff you post online.
|
|
Vietnam's long coastline makes it prone to destructive storms and flooding.
|
|
They're also not as prone to "burn-in," according to Kuo.
|
|
We're biologically prone to getting hooked on these sorts of experiences.
|
|
And some people are more prone to negative thinking than others.
|
|
So why are the world's 1 percent so prone to addiction?
|
|
As well, emerging market nations are more prone to runaway inflation.
|
|
Also, being an unofficial version, the app was prone to crashing.
|
|
Wall Street is prone to making errors over-extrapolating growth trends.
|
|
Williams's forehand, once prone to breakdowns, looks as smooth as ever.
|
|
Even his admirers concede that he is prone to senatorial bloviation.
|
|
It is less prone to rejection by the body's immune system.
|
|
That can make those faults more prone to slippages and earthquakes.
|
|
Left to its own devices my brain is prone to rumination.
|
|
Paper forms are more prone to human error, both sides agree.
|
|
The long run In 1988, Joe Biden was prone to embellishment.
|
|
And counterintuitively, they can make you even more prone to blisters.
|
|
The kingdom's armed forces have often appeared unprepared and prone to mistakes.
|
|
Another risk is that the process will be prone to government influence.
|
|
The customer deposit base is prone to volatility, despite the positive developments.
|
|
While in the neonatal care unit, they are also prone to infections.
|
|
Like mine, her skin was peppered with freckles and prone to blushing.
|
|
Marijuana isn&apost as prone to plant pests, and harvesting is simpler.
|
|
The sandstone formations are easy to carve, but they're prone to erosion.
|
|
This devolution of power made American Puritans uniquely prone to anxious introspection.
|
|
Wireless connections are also more prone to signal drops and high latency.
|
|
That's a profit opportunity, but it also makes banks prone to runs.
|
|
While the area is prone to earthquakes, it is generally sparsely populated.
|
|
Netflix's She's Gotta Have It isn't exactly a show prone to mysteries.
|
|
On days when we're both femme, we're much more prone to harassment.
|
|
Lithium ion batteries are prone to combust if they're damaged or defective.
|
|
More people moving into areas prone to brush fires also isn't helping.
|
|
That measure is prone to being bumped around by one-off effects.
|
|
I got lazy about packing lunches and more prone to impulse spending.
|
|
He "was prone to go off the reservation," write Hope and Wright.
|
|
These self-built neighborhoods are prone to collapse when natural disasters hit.
|
|
But be proactive and eat your oatmeal if you're prone to constipation.
|
|
Their enlarged limbs may smell foul, as they become prone to infections.
|
|
LONDON (Reuters) - All commodity markets are prone to boom and bust cycles.
|
|
Like Mr Brown, she is prone to overblown rhetoric, irritability and indecisiveness.
|
|
Is Trump especially prone to fits of anger compared to other presidents?
|
|
Cyber-security types said the system was insecure and prone to error.
|
|
A sign outside the cave warns visitors it is prone to flooding.
|
|
"My skin was congested, gray, and prone to chronic breakouts," he says.
|
|
"A gifted child might be prone to complete social meltdowns," says Anguera.
|
|
TheOGM: I guess I was prone to seeing it at that point.
|
|
Communication among residents is difficult and the system is prone to mistakes.
|
|
He was prone to depression and she was always worried about him.
|
|
Droughts are more severe in places that are more prone to drought.
|
|
The rupiah has often been prone to sharp swings in the past.
|
|
The K5 is evidently prone to making headlines about things falling over.
|
|
They are also prone to harbour more conservative social and political views.
|
|
Mainly, that certain areas are more prone to nerve damage than others.
|
|
It is not just Nigerian politics that is prone to verbal flourishes.
|
|
We are prone to seeing order in disorder and sense in nonsense.
|
|
Since its launch, the Apple News app seems more prone to crashing.
|
|
Government planning and protection are slow, expensive and prone to unintended consequences.
|
|
But nearly every frontrunner for a cabinet position is prone to scandal.
|
|
Iran sits astride major fault lines and is prone to frequent tremors.
|
|
Men, on the other hand, are prone to ego and self-absorption.
|
|
Those children would be more prone to having this kind of reaction.
|
|
Manzoor describes her character, Shugs, as a "goofball" prone to existential rants.
|
|
Scottish Folds are prone to genetic disorders, but I really like her.
|
|
I'm very prone to cravings for sweets even when I'm totally full.
|
|
"Longer hair is more prone to splitting and getting dry," says Ward.
|
|
The disease made him prone to dehydration and weakened his immune system.
|
|
It is prone to cyclones and tropical storms this time of year.
|
|
MRSA is psychologically crippling, especially if you're someone who's prone to anxiety.
|
|
They're also prone to theft and vandalism, which makes them incredibly wasteful.
|
|
That's because they're no less prone to negative partisanship, intrinsically, than Republicans.
|
|
Charles de Gaulle, a titan not prone to false modesty, wrote four
|
|
People are less prone to bad behavior when multiple eyes are watching.
|
|
He is easily baited, reliant on sycophants, and prone to conspiracy theories.
|
|
Turns, there's a reason why we're prone to hiccups when we're drunk.
|
|
Are one or both of the Walkers unstable and prone to violence?
|
|
He's prone to making wry asides as he mills about the kitchen.
|
|
Employees are also prone to make assumptions about their Mandarin-speaking clients.
|
|
People will be prone to exaggerating today, and they will miss details.
|
|
That makes it frizzy and more prone to breaking and split ends.
|
|
Startuppers are frequently overworked, prone to procrastination and last-minute decision making.
|
|
He is prone to harrowing anxiety, which Haslett renders with manic urgency.
|
|
But of course, condoms can break and are prone to user error.
|
|
As a result, caregivers can be more prone to having serious illnesses.
|
|
Veterans disproportionately attend for-profit colleges, which are disproportionately prone to closures.
|
|
Northern countries prone to snow, like Canada, may also become attractive markets.
|
|
Young athletes are particularly prone to prolonged recovery and complications from concussion.
|
|
Like many writers with a bold thesis, Guyatt is prone to exaggeration.
|
|
In fact, we humans are prone to passing a lot of gas.
|
|
Legacy infrastructure and city zoning issues also made Houston prone to floods.
|
|
Products are not the only ones prone to constant change and improvement.
|
|
A president prone to making mistakes, however, can easily doom us all.
|
|
As a result, the apps were buggy, slow, and prone to crashes.
|
|
But there are always those who are prone to being treatment-resistant.
|
|
The other Senator is elderly & was prone to shaking throughout the service.
|
|
Iran lies on dozens of fault lines and is prone to quakes.
|
|
"These are not people prone to hyperbole," Mr. Rubio said on CNN.
|
|
"The president himself is prone to change his mind on a whim."
|
|
The president, alas, has been more prone to scapegoating than problem solving.
|
|
The movie is slightly prone to such fallacies, starting with the title.
|
|
Veterans are also prone to seeking one another out across the aisle.
|
|
For years, I described myself as someone who wasn't prone to anger.
|
|
He was a consummate rebel, prone to promiscuity and diva-like behavior.
|
|
The fundamental problem with mob justice is that it's prone to randomness.
|
|
People who live between worlds, between identities, are prone to making mistakes.
|
|
Pros: Low price, resists damage, high water volumeCons: Prone to leaking issues
|
|
Furthermore, TSA agents are numerous, fallible, and prone to misusing their authority.
|
|
Should it pass, AB 2320 may prove similarly prone to widespread adoption.
|
|
Indonesia straddles several tectonic plates and is highly prone to natural disasters.
|
|
Q. What foods should I avoid if I'm prone to kidney stones?
|
|
And some of these countries, like Greece, are prone to slip backward.
|
|
This makes us more prone to over-indulgence, so avoid going overboard.
|
|
Because I think we're too prone to this sort of racial profiling.
|
|
Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), a moderate not prone to listening to leadership.
|
|
Paraguay's prison system has long been underfunded, understaffed and prone to corruption.
|
|
Trump is massively unpredictable and prone to changing his mind without warning.
|
|
If you're especially prone to blisters, some runners swear by toe socks.
|
|
When investigators infused CGRP into people prone to migraines, they got headaches.
|
|
Mr. de Blasio attacked the reporter, as he is prone to do.
|
|
The conversation turns to personality—why are some people prone to nastiness?
|
|
You may think I'm prone to a confirmation bias of my own.
|
|
These days, Penn Station is prone to leaving most travelers feeling dyspeptic.
|
|
But in the US, official statistics are far less prone to manipulation.
|
|
But human perception is prone to error, philosophers have long pointed out.
|
|
That makes them safer, as liquid electrolyte can be prone to explosion.
|
|
But Golden was not prone to make rigid distinctions in this matter.
|
|
If you're prone to vertigo the morning after, maybe watch something else.
|
|
If you're prone to credit card debt, refinancing could magnify the problem.
|
|
If you're prone to motion sickness, travel can be a miserable experience.
|
|
In conversation, she is generous and thoughtful, if occasionally prone to floridity.
|
|
And women can be just as prone to gender stereotypes as men.
|
|
But when he wins, he is prone to mighty explosions of joy.
|
|
It was an older and much trickier operation, notoriously prone to failure.
|
|
Instead, we are more prone to using the cameras on our cellphones.
|
|
Big city governments in particular are prone to communication breakdowns between departments.
|
|
Individually, these countries clearly are much more prone to pressure from Russia.
|
|
And they are prone to breakdowns that can be difficult to fix.
|
|
It's not just that they're prone to addressing the news of today.
|
|
If you're prone to dryness, do it every two weeks, recommends Twine.
|
|
In "Runny Babbit Returns," we follow a young rabbit prone to spoonerisms.
|
|
He had a lengthy arrest record and seemed prone to violent fits.
|
|
The high altitude airport is prone to bird strikes and other hazards.
|
|
Women in their 40s are actually prone to spending the most money.
|
|
But without rigorous studies, we're going to remain prone to research hype.
|
|
Why am I so prone to falling into mental traps like this?
|
|
Like Exum, he's also prone to long periods of mistake-filled basketball.
|
|
But in China and India, young women have been unusually prone to suicide.
|
|
But fermentation remains a messy process, and one prone to spoilage and waste.
|
|
Certain categories in our closets are more prone to of-the-moment trendiness.
|
|
Dogs, especially snub-nosed breeds prone to breathing problems, can easily overheat outside.
|
|
"The problem with typing code is it's really prone to error," Leavitt said.
|
|
They are prone to cranial hemorrhage, and sometimes a heart duct remains open.
|
|
However, he's much more prone to success underwater than he is on television.
|
|
At this point, they're prone to gushing about each other in the press.
|
|
As a result, his life story is distinctly prone to exaggeration and inconsistency.
|
|
Immigration is the area "most prone to such a judicial role", he says.
|
|
But she has become prone to hormonal imbalance and gets tired more easily.
|
|
They are prone to "catastrophising", or interpreting as disastrous what is merely undesirable.
|
|
In television appearances he has appeared garrulous, twitchy and prone to self-contradiction.
|
|
Women are more prone to this type of cancer than men, said Jemal.
|
|
Women and people of color are particularly prone to misidentification by the software.
|
|
Clinton is more prone to adjusting her politics to fit the moment. Mrs.
|
|
Some have also found that fish oil supplements are prone to becoming rancid.
|
|
My roommates and I were already prone to living in our own garbage.
|
|
He said Urban was an addict and an alcoholic, prone to terrifying rages.
|
|
Medical environments like hospitals can also be prone to overprescribing antibiotics for humans.
|
|
This is especially critical for executives who are more prone to act impulsively.
|
|
Pharmaceutical companies have reformulated their drugs to make them less prone to abuse.
|
|
The context: AI researchers are prone to using games to measure their progress.
|
|
Even if they weren't at this job, perhaps cscareerthrowaway567 is prone to them.
|
|
Oregon, Washington and Montana are among the states also prone to destructive blazes.
|
|
Maybe I was more irritable than usual, a bit more prone to snap.
|
|
For one grandson prone to motion sickness, I took some meclizine as well.
|
|
The left, once entrenched, proved just as prone to corruption as the right.
|
|
They are cheerful, colourfully attired and prone to break into dance or song.
|
|
Why do people prone to violence find Islam so appealing for their purpose?
|
|
Investors are prone to similar sorts of errors when things go against them.
|
|
Among friendly audiences, Republicans are prone to dismiss climate change as a hoax.
|
|
If you're prone to excessive worrying, you might be familiar with this scene.
|
|
Hospital patients are more prone to infections, due to illnesses or open wounds.
|
|
For example, it is a misconception that teenagers are prone to risk-taking.
|
|
Coastal cities in South Florida are prone to flooding even on sunny days.
|
|
The rosebushes in Shaza Mehdi's front yard are beautiful but prone to sickness.
|
|
Being small, they are more prone to being knocked over in the road.
|
|
But the new machines were a nightmare, prone to crashes and—worse—hacking.
|
|
Elderly people are most at risk as they are more prone to heatstroke.
|
|
Worst of all, individuals with Down syndrome are prone to develop early dementia.
|
|
The authorisation system is prone to corruption because it gives regulators undue power.
|
|
Not one person prone to stress fractures is prone for the same reason.
|
|
Another details why they believe Comey is an unreliable witness prone to exaggeration.
|
|
Biologic valves are more prone to deterioration and may require a second operation.
|
|
That facility is in an area labeled especially dangerous and prone to flooding.
|
|
The criss-crossing wires were prone to being cut or damaged in crashes.
|
|
Built on what was once a lake, it is also prone to flooding.
|
|
Obviously, electronics handled in this way are prone to failure at any time.
|
|
But the reality is that we're prone to repeat the same mistakes sometimes.
|
|
Vietnam is prone to destructive storms and flooding due to its long coastline.
|
|
Because we're all human beings, we are naturally prone to having off days.
|
|
The Big Five are still prone to veto any dilution of their power.
|
|
I was prone to taking what people said and did at face value.
|
|
Donald Trump is prone to boasting of his ability to accomplish improbable feats.
|
|
I think Google forgot that even existed, as it's sometimes prone to do.
|
|
Maybe Perez thinks he's showing toughness against Trump, who's prone to foul language.
|
|
It also produces stronger joins as conventional welds can be prone to corrosion.
|
|
More than that, they're prone to manipulation by big players, intentional or not.
|
|
Cars with steering wheels that were prone to fail and cause a crash.
|
|
Purdue had long denied that the original OxyContin was especially prone to abuse.
|
|
Argentines, however, are prone to overreact, and alarmist theatrics are a national pastime.
|
|
Alas, like Rose, Noah, 31, has in recent years been prone to injuries.
|
|
Some say they have other allergies, while others aren't prone to that problem.
|
|
Being someone prone to extreme behavior, I went in the complete opposite direction.
|
|
The horse players were silky, athletic, reserved, and prone to much less licking.
|
|
WhatsApp and other messaging apps were found prone to attacks on group communications.
|
|
Texas' terrain and location make parts of the state prone to unruly weather.
|
|
He is prone to frequent infections in one leg and requires intermittent hospitalization.
|
|
The masses had proved themselves to be ignorant, irrational and prone to violence.
|
|
For that matter, they'll need less refrigeration because they're less prone to spoilage.
|
|
For example, are people who are prone to opioid abuse drawn to enlist?
|
|
The handle should be sturdy, strong, heat resistant, and not prone to breakage.
|
|
If you're prone to bad skin and a pricier product works, buy it.
|
|
Mr. Vance's mother was an empress of instability — violent, feckless, prone to hysteria.
|
|
Humans are particularly prone to choosing short-term benefits over long-term gains.
|
|
There is a house outside Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that is prone to flooding.
|
|
No cuisine is more prone to regional pride and sectarian strife than barbecue.
|
|
Subprime borrowers are more prone to loss of jobs or lower hourly wages.
|
|
With dry brush and no groundwater, the area is already prone to blazes.
|
|
So if you're prone to mascara smudges on your lids, apply that first.
|
|
Cryptocurrencies are prone to wild price swings in very short periods of time.
|
|
Their specialty is the communication of rage to an audience prone to histrionics.
|
|
These townspeople are prone to believing in the paranormal, but terrified by it.
|
|
This is a moment when people are upset and prone to violence. 953.
|
|
She is prone to panic attacks, as are many of us these days.
|
|
Scallops are delicate, prone to being overshadowed if you approach them without care.
|
|
I'm prone to overexplaining things –- when my own understanding of them is shaky.
|
|
Not all of Mr. Xi's policies appear prone to waves of excess zeal.
|
|
Jane is fiercely loyal but is also an alcoholic prone to emotional outbursts.
|
|
Even events that bring together relatively wealthy tourists are prone to disease outbreaks.
|
|
"Paintings are delicate and easily prone to damage," she added in an email.
|
|
How the dams and reservoirs work Houston has long been prone to flooding.
|
|
Spencer is moody, cerebral and prone to bouts of caution and common sense.
|
|
Their numbers are growing and they seem more prone to committing violent crimes.
|
|
All three are immensely flawed as well: possessive, naive, prone to hurting others.
|
|
He was once a serious politician prone to indiscipline; now he is wild.
|
|
Bolton's views are controversial, but he's not known as particularly prone to lying.
|
|
Did Carl, a heart surgeon prone to abusive rages, do it on purpose?
|
|
It's known that users are prone to fatigue from repeated and unwanted prompts.
|
|
Myanmar is prone to natural disasters such as floods, cyclones, earthquakes and droughts.
|
|
During this period, we'll be prone to errors of communication, technology, and planning.
|
|
It's overly simplistic, and too prone to flattened discourse and protracted, useless fights.
|
|
He can be as unfocused, long-winded and prone to misstatement as ever.
|
|
He can be as unfocused, long-winded and prone to misstatement as ever.
|
|
Pros: Stylish, several colors, affordableCons: Not very protective, prone to scratches and cuts
|
|
Each is prone to bungling the good fortune, but in his own way.
|
|
Avoiding wildfires is onerous in fire country that's becoming more prone to fires.
|
|
It is particularly prone to flooding because it was built on swampy grounds.
|
|
Jewell is polite, hard-working and prone to surprising, unsolicited acts of generosity.
|
|
This is an emerging area of cyber defense, prone to misunderstanding and confusion.
|
|
He is friendly and unceremonious, and prone to bursts of high-pitched laughter.
|
|
He is a business tycoon prone to obscene conduct, malicious speech and eccentricity.
|
|
However, sports bra straps and athletic pant linings are also prone to rubbing.
|
|
They are more prone to groupthink and less likely to question faulty assumptions.
|
|
In regions prone to wildfire, the same dynamics and tensions are in play.
|
|
Such stock often is thinly traded and prone to fluctuate due to speculation.
|
|
Analysts said the sector was prone to further weakness in the near term.
|
|
Research has shown that people with attention disorders are particularly prone to boredom.
|
|
But they're always slapdash and human, and prone to deliberate or accidental breakage.
|
|
A college freshman, she is sleepless and prone to wild bouts of panic.
|
|
I tend to be cautious and rational, prone to keep everything under control.
|
|
I'm not typically prone to acne; in fact, I'm usually on the drier side.
|
|
Certain groups are more prone to maxing out their cards than others, WalletHub found.
|
|
With November's love-out-loud starmap, your private sign is uncharacteristically prone to PDA.
|
|
The keyboard feels softer to type on and is less prone to crumb damage.
|
|
German shepherds are disproportionately prone to musculoskeletal disorders, arthritis, diarrhea, obesity, and behavioral problems.
|
|
The only problem is that these gadgets are both hackable and prone to bugs.
|
|
I'm prone to eczema so I expected the worst: small spots, rashes, and burns.
|
|
And, like the president, his posts are prone to massive backlash and meme-ification.
|
|
The first thing to know about human memory is that it's prone to error.
|
|
Randolph told the Star that her CPAP machine is uncomfortable and prone to breaking.
|
|
While clinical diagnostic surveys are actually quite accurate, they are prone to some inaccuracies.
|
|
Two years later, it halted sales of Oxycodone, a prescription painkiller prone to abuse.
|
|
Coronaviruses, on the whole, are "somewhat less prone to mutation than flu," Morse said.
|
|
Then, as this team is prone to do, it crawled out of its crypt.
|
|
It makes the flat area of southeast Texas prone to flooding during intense storms.
|
|
It expands a lot as it absorbs charge, and it's prone to rapid degradation.
|
|
Already prone to blood clots, Williams was concerned she was experiencing a pulmonary embolism.
|
|
If that player happens to be prone to gratuitous legato runs, all the better.
|
|
The study followed 116 patients who were prone to repeatedly suffering from the infection.
|
|
Some mosquitoes, like Aedes albopictus, are prone to infection by a bacterium called Wolbachia.
|
|
GLOBAL oil markets have historically been prone to epic cycles of boom and bust.
|
|
"Women who suffer from anxiety seem to be more prone to blackouts," Denning says.
|
|
The deforestation also left large areas that were prone to massive amounts of erosion.
|
|
Some people are prone to speaking ill of New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady.
|
|
Located on the bank of the Nile, Luxor is extremely prone to annual flooding.
|
|
Moisturizing will help, but some women are simply more prone to marks than others.
|
|
JAPAN is prone to fads—usually in fancy desserts or fashion ripe for Instagram.
|
|
H21, after all, is an extremely light molecule, prone to fizzling off into space.
|
|
But for the musicians atop that scene, life was not prone to self-effacement.
|
|
Violence and political unrest make production in Nigeria and Libya prone to big swings.
|
|
Great for creating a seal, but prone to picking up lint in your pocket.
|
|
He is squeaky clean and prone to moralise, but not in a cloying way.
|
|
But those interviews didn't stir the controversy pot like Trump is prone to do.
|
|
"If you don't have a plan, you're much more prone to errors," Brown says.
|
|
Women, she believes, are particularly prone to judging themselves for failing to please others.
|
|
Oil plays a central role in a clutch of emerging markets prone to trouble.
|
|
Such ads can stoke divisive public debate during elections and are prone to disinformation.
|
|
His range in the field was evaporating, his bat prone to weeks of ineffectiveness.
|
|
But like the batteries on many cheap hoverboards, the Sun is prone to explosion.
|
|
Another big issue is that the overall consumer lifespan is prone to user error.
|
|
To be sure, every financial institution is prone to risk of internal self-dealing.
|
|
I'm not prone to depression or anxiety like I was in my younger days.
|
|
However, the performance of this sector remains volatile and is prone to FX fluctuations.
|
|
And I'm prone to very adult language in my excitement, but I controlled myself.
|
|
Poor component quality, however, meant many of those devices are prone to catching fire.
|
|
LIKE other areas of public policy, central banking is prone to fads and fashions.
|
|
But what makes someone prone to this, while another person has consistently blissful dreams?
|
|
We are all prone to impulse-buying, which is what I'd encourage to limit.
|
|
They're selfish, vain, prone to self-sabotage, and unable to handle criticism or rejection.
|
|
Thank rising prosperity, better policing and demography, with fewer young men prone to mischief.
|
|
"People who are prone to anxiety tend to feel uncertainty as threatening," Chapman says.
|
|
They are prone to using the tactics of the extreme right, during political confrontations.
|
|
But the program invades personal privacy and prejudices against those prone to ill health.
|
|
Even with all its virtues, that same trend could leave you prone to hackers.
|
|
Yet he became prone to smashing racquets, arguing with umpires, and berating ball kids.
|
|
But while reactionary thought is prone to real wickedness, it also contains real insights.
|
|
Trump is all libido, lacks impulse control, and is prone to poor decision-making.
|
|
He is an adulterer, a hypocrite, politically clumsy and prone to retweeting racist posts.
|
|
The historical record shows that early cities and states were prone to sudden implosion.
|
|
The country is prone to heat waves and is already contending with devastating floods.
|
|
Somalia is at significant risk for drought, making the country more prone to conflict.
|
|
Also, these would be great for children who are prone to developing bad posture.
|
|
The boy is prone to "experiencing a meltdown" because of his diagnoses, she said.
|
|
However, Saudi, Russia and other oil production giant countries are prone to increase production.
|
|
More prone to stare at a screen than to engage our neighbors in conversation.
|
|
Australia is prone to extreme weather events such as flooding, tropical cyclones and bushfires.
|
|
Dentists may also offer sealants for older children and for adults prone to cavities.
|
|
The camps were built quickly, with shelters in places prone to landslides and flooding.
|
|
I'm prone to acne and scarring, so it does a lot for my confidence.
|
|
Yet both Trump and Kim are prone to intemperate rhetoric, peacocking, and impulsive decisions.
|
|
"Machine-made terra cottas are prone to cracking in the winter," Ms. Freda said.
|
|
Virtualized x85033 environments are prone to sprawl and demand constant attention — and constant spending.
|
|
Methamphetamine use can also make blood vessel walls weak and more prone to rupture.
|
|
Williams looked flat-footed and immobile in the quarterfinal match, prone to baffling mistakes.
|
|
Humans are also prone to the belief that they are good people, she said.
|
|
Traders said that South Australia is particularly prone to price spikes and supply squeezes.
|
|
Built on land that was once a lake, it is also prone to flooding.
|
|
The downside of such a hard metal, though, is that it's prone to chipping.
|
|
Allegations that the governing body is prone to corruption have proliferated in recent years.
|
|
As humans, we're prone to anthropomorphizing animals — explaining their behavior in human, emotional terms.
|
|
Typically, hair with high porosity is prone to damage, breakage, and gaps, Bailey explains.
|
|
The hardest part about dating a Libra is that they're prone to conspicuous silences.
|
|
Over-the-air UHF signals are also more prone to interference than VHF signals.
|
|
People on both sides of the aisle appear almost equally prone to conspiracies now.
|
|
But Mr. Lamb, prone to sports metaphors and coaching wisdom, does not discourage easily.
|
|
Because the material is expensive and prone to cracking, watchmakers rarely experiment with it.
|
|
Morganlander also cites small caps as more prone to volatility over large cap stocks.
|
|
"He's been prone to offer his views about China in the afternoon," Cramer said.
|
|
They love the good things in life and might be prone to over-indulgence.
|
|
Both vertical and sloped seawalls are prone to violent overrunning by waves during storms.
|
|
The state is also prone to all kinds of natural disasters, not just quakes.
|
|
Bulgaria is ranked as the EU state most prone to corruption and organised crime.
|
|
Politicos are notoriously prone to attributing election outcomes to gaffes and other oversimplified causes.
|
|
She is prone to such clots, a condition that nearly killed her in 2011.
|
|
Women on average are more prone to anxiety Make tech and leadership less stressful.
|
|
" He also criticized Ms. Norvill's testimony as "at times prone to exaggeration and embellishment.
|
|
Connell and Marianne are self-dramatizing and prone to putting themselves in terrible situations.
|
|
There is some déjà vu this week, which Mercury retrograde is prone to summon.
|
|
"The Greeks believed that women's bodies made them prone to instability," she told me.
|
|
Retrieving such experiences from memory is an equally selective task and prone to error.
|
|
You don't want anything too complicated or too prone to tipping over and spilling.
|
|
Testing the camera I found images prone to high acutance and over saturated colors.
|
|
But Neptune is prone to denial, while Jupiter is always concerned with the truth.
|
|
He is mostly bald, with a rim of white stubble, and prone to sunburn.
|
|
But he also developed a reputation as arrogant, ambitious and prone to offensive comments.
|
|
Mann's 9-year-old daughter, Lulu, about Jasper, who is prone to public meltdowns.
|
|
Some defenders of the 2015 nuclear deal are prone to answer: Not a lot.
|
|
Without a seat at the table, PE is prone to being on the table.
|
|
You're prone to dig for truths and from your generation's perspective; knowledge is power.
|
|
Science is composed of humans prone to self-serving reasoning just like everyone else.
|
|
Adopted when she was 4 years old, Danielle Kelley was prone to cutting herself.
|
|
Presumably a black belly would make them more conspicuous, and more prone to predation.
|
|
Critics have charged for years that the metrics are untrustworthy and prone to manipulation.
|
|
Season after season, its protected lands are prone to landslides, flash floods and wildfires.
|
|
Trees are prone to anthropomorphism; we project our dreams and our anxieties onto them.
|
|
But GJ 1151 is a quieter star, less prone to outbursts than its siblings.
|
|
Securing internal communications: Internal communications are often prone to data leaks and cyber espionage.
|
|
But those generators are prone to failure, he said, and don't reach mountain communities.
|
|
"He is prone to being sort of all or nothing," Wright said of Trump.
|
|
We're also looking into the factors that make this region prone to seismic activity.
|
|
"Like all human judgments, the Nobel committee's decisions are prone to error," he said.
|
|
I did notice that the special black finish is prone to smudges and fingerprints.
|
|
Quantum computing chips are very unstable, and prone to interference from heat and electricity.
|
|
A population buffetted by economic upheaval and climate change is especially prone to paranoia.
|
|
Airports, designed for the complex interaction of specific processes, are inherently prone to obsolescence.
|
|
It's ideal for people who might be prone to falling, such as the elderly.
|
|
Its online system for reporting counterfeits, many say, is cumbersome and prone to hiccups.
|
|
Barron said projects on federal lands were most prone to legal challenges and delays.
|
|
If you're prone to brain farts, you should also have some stalling tactics ready.
|
|
Why are senior members of the Democratic Party, in particular, prone to such excesses?
|
|
They were a technological marvel, but they were prone to problems when it rained.
|
|
But global warming is making the ice less predictable and more prone to buckling.
|
|
He thought them loutish, nosy, excessively fond of alcohol, and dangerously prone to violence.
|
|
And the star is erratic, prone to outbursts that can mimic a planet transit.
|
|
Since the murder rate is generally very low, it's prone to large statistical fluctuations.
|
|
It's true, grass can be tricky and prone to changes as a natural surface.
|
|
POET argued that the connection to Argo made the swap contracts prone to manipulation.
|
|
Many cutting-edge innovations remain buggy or more prone to failure than human workers.
|
|
But despite their connection, they are prone to bouts of mutual exasperation and impatience.
|
|
Since the murder rate is generally very low, it's prone to larger statistical fluctuations.
|
|
If you combine a dog prone to ear infections, like a poodle, labrador retriever or cocker spaniel, with one prone to skin conditions like a bulldog or a doberman you could end up shelling out thousands to address the combination of problems.
|
|
Clinton was less prone to stumbling and had a better political operation in his state.
|
|
Riverdale has a very passionate fanbase, many of whom are prone to shipping certain couples.
|
|
Musk is prone to setting grandiose targets, only to miss them or dial them back.
|
|
They wanted to figure out if certain races were more prone to anxiety than others.
|
|
That's a cause that Didi knows well — and is prone to putting money towards helping.
|
|
Well, I kept on being prone to infections, and I kept getting infection after infection.
|
|
Oh, and they're also prone to an inherited brain disorder known as pug dog encephalitis.
|
|
The low-lying city is also prone to air pollution and flooding, and is sinking.
|
|
So be sure to prop yourself up with multiple pillows if you're prone to heartburn.
|
|
With valuation levels considered high in many stocks, investors may be more prone to sell.
|
|
I like the new Pro so much I'm prone to taking dramatic photos of it.
|
|
I am, indeed, a picky consumer prone to outrage and always ready for a boycott.
|
|
In practice, such estimates rely on small sample sizes and are easily prone to error.
|
|
A very private man, de Gaulle was also cold, mostly humourless and prone to melancholy.
|
|
She doesn't like shaking hands, and is prone to foul-mouthed personal attacks on Stein.
|
|
Chronically high levels can increase blood pressure and make an individual more prone to illness.
|
|
Seeing that most people forgo protection there, it makes sense that it's prone to cancer.
|
|
The left-wing establishment is just as prone to rewarding failure as the conservative establishment.
|
|
Preliminary experiments on mice genetically engineered to be prone to vascular disease suggested they were.
|
|
Should people living in areas prone to flooding and shoreline erosion pack up and leave?
|
|
That includes even Republican-led ones prone to playing down the dangers of climate change.
|
|
However, trigger-word activated voice AIs have been shown to be prone to accidental activation.
|
|
Other robots are just as prone to crashing and falling, often resulting in expensive repairs.
|
|
So why haven't tech investors — usually prone to growth-at-all-costs thinking — punished Facebook?
|
|
But you've also let your guard down, which can leave you prone to impulse purchases.
|
|
Robots tend not to make good chefs, even if they are less prone to tantrums.
|
|
Steadfast in his belief in his own superiority, Nureyev is also prone to monstrous outbursts.
|
|
Young birds are very sensitive and could be prone to infections at a young age.
|
|
The violence in a nation prone to political strife has alarmed Kenyans and Western diplomats.
|
|
But they also distrust less objective types of assessment, which may be prone to corruption.
|
|
And some have already complained that the Note 7's screens are prone to breaking.
|
|
That makes them too bulky and prone to failure for use in mass-produced vehicles.
|
|
If you're prone to forgetting, set a reminder on your phone if you have to.
|
|
But for the minority prone to gambling problems, targeted marketing "can be destructive," Whelan says.
|
|
That means their music is prone to being danced to by people who shouldn't dance.
|
|
However, this happy meat tube seems prone to getting itself into some tricky situations. pic.twitter.
|
|
Some are already traumatized by their experiences and prone to mental illness and self-harm.
|
|
But the gangs emerging today are less organised and more prone to commit petty crime.
|
|
On Wednesday, U.S. regulators warned that some Samsung washing machines are also prone to exploding.
|
|
In practice, periodic gluts and shortages mean that oil prices are prone to wild swings.
|
|
Systems characterised by positive feedback tend to be prone to instability and boom-bust cycles.
|
|
Drought dating back to 2015 has made the regions prone to flash flooding after rain.
|
|
Deforestation has left most of the nation stripped of trees and extremely prone to landslides.
|
|
Qantas Airways flights from Sydney to Dallas, for example, are occasionally prone to weight restrictions.
|
|
Many American presidents have also been lousy at their jobs and prone to irrational behaviour.
|
|
"Maybe one person is more prone to plaque buildup and the other isn't," Akosa says.
|
|
These snakes, identified by the Post as western diamondbacks, are venomous and prone to biting.
|
|
The toll was high, even for a country prone to earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and typhoons.
|
|
Behavioral science explains why we are all so prone to preferring money today over tomorrow.
|
|
When adversaries believe you are weak, they are emboldened to act -- and prone to miscalculate.
|
|
"They're kids; they're schoolchildren," he said of the users on Facebook groups prone to extremism.
|
|
It is complementing the other institutions involved and is perhaps less prone to political compromise.
|
|
First and foremost he's rock's proudest peacock, prone to the opulent, outrageous and occasionally ostentatious.
|
|
The Mexican capital is highly prone to earthquakes because it's built on a drained lakebed.
|
|
Such scenarios play to the advantage of the other side -- leaving ours prone to manipulation.
|
|
The remaining loose skin was prone to infections, so his vet decided to remove it.
|
|
But that open source philosophy makes Roblox prone to hacks and exploits such as Asshurt.
|
|
For those extremely prone to feeling guilty, April Fools' Day can be a difficult holiday.
|
|
Some clitorises are prone to adhesions because of the way they're structured, Dr. Rubin says.
|
|
Mr al-Barnawi's lot are more prone to tolerate Muslims who choose not to fight.
|
|
Traders are betting the stock will remain prone to wild gyrations in the near term.
|
|
Someone who collects isn't prone to giving, and I'm always trying to turn those people.
|
|
Behind the crony index is the idea that some industries are prone to "rent seeking".
|
|
No wonder GDP statistics are still so prone to constant and substantial revision (see article).
|
|
LONDON, Sep 9983 (Reuters) - The London tin market is becoming increasingly prone to spread tightness.
|
|
And most important, all their cells are getting older and more prone to going astray.
|
|
The president is unpopular and prone to tweeting inflammatory nonsense for no reason at all.
|
|
Any mechanical part is prone to wearing down, and the home button is no exception.
|
|
He also planned to cut federal insurance coverage for homes that were prone to floods.
|
|
The wit is sharp, quick as ever, but now he's prone to … what's the word?
|
|
Generic injectables are prone to shortage because of low profit margins and high production costs.
|
|
It also hopes to build concrete lightning shelters in areas prone to strikes, Mohsin said.
|
|
Prominent GOP figures who are prone to jab at Trump were fiercer than usual. Sen.
|
|
Justice Anthony Kennedy's habit of writing in sweeping phrases makes him especially prone to this.
|
|
Pros: Almost unbreakableCons: Expensive, prone to messy knots, difficult to break (when the time comes)
|
|
They are more impulsive and more prone to change as their brains continue to develop.
|
|
As our brains age, studies show that seniors are more prone to risk taking behaviors.
|
|
The observatory will also use new approaches to make it less prone to false detections.
|
|
The president has proven himself risk-acceptant and prone to never second-guess his instincts.
|
|
Even without any interference, such information technology upgrades are prone to accidental failures and disruptions.
|
|
Since you're prone to dig deep beneath the surface, you tend to drag out decisions.
|
|
But the anxious body is one prone to excess, spilling adrenaline thoughtlessly into overburdened veins.
|
|
A tracker for keys, wallets, bags or any other important items they're prone to lose
|
|
But he can also be rigid and prone to doubling down on provocative public statements.
|
|
Systems characterized by positive feedback tend to be prone to instability and boom-bust cycles.
|
|
Whenever it went to sea over the years, the Admiral Kuznetsov was prone to accidents.
|
|
He is lurid, pulpy, and prone to pushing facts as far as they can go.
|
|
Towns situated right beside the Mississippi River, like Grafton, Illinois, are especially prone to flooding.
|
|
Less profitable lenders are more vulnerable to economic shocks, and prone to taking on risks.
|
|
We already get hints of Orlando's insecurities, suggestions that he might be prone to instability.
|
|
Secondly, people, naturally, are more prone to regret circumstances over which they had some control.
|
|
Although it's probably true of other genres, dance music seems particularly prone to cyclical trends.
|
|
As the father of a four-year-old boy who's prone to seizures, I worry.
|
|
Children and teens who are overweight are particularly prone to weight-related bullying and teasing.
|
|
It has been divisive, misleading, unburdened by facts and prone to personality politics and gimmicks.
|
|
Benioff is not prone to understatement, but his respect for Block has been borne out.
|
|
A cup of coffee for my mind, Is how I'm prone to think on thee.
|
|
We're always prone to looking at the bad things, the things that aren't working right.
|
|
Samsung discontinued its Galaxy Note 7 smartphone, which was prone to catching fire, last month.
|
|
"Those loose joins are unstable and prone to dislocation and chronic pain," the center says.
|
|
Mike Burden is a troubled young man, without meaningful goals and prone to violent outbursts.
|
|
But she conceded that even emergency officials are prone to rumors, at least among themselves.
|
|
He ignored women almost completely and was prone to infatuation with younger, intellectually stimulating men.
|
|
Frail and prone to a variety of ailments, Locke died from cardiac illness in 1954.
|
|
The skyscraper sits on land that is "prone to liquefying," though it probably won't fall.
|
|
He had been physically abused as a child and was prone to getting into fistfights.
|
|
But Cannes is especially prone to this sort of behavior for a number of reasons.
|
|
They are prone to funks like this, stretches when their normally liquid offense gets chunky.
|
|
But some worry that hastily thrown together online notarization systems are also prone to fraud.
|
|
Without a domestic central bank, the Italian treasuries market is prone to self-fulfilling panics.
|
|
Of course, make sure you light them in a place that isn't prone to wildfires….
|
|
"These people are notoriously prone to errors in judgment and unrestrained behavior," Dr. Vogel said.
|
|
Pros: Easy setup and breakdown, lightweight and portable, good priceCons: Mesh walls prone to tearing
|
|
Indonesia, which straddles the Pacific's "Ring of Fire," is prone to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
|
|
Our blindness makes us more susceptible to them; more prone to replicate them, not less.
|
|
But without p53, these edited cells would also be more prone to gaining dangerous mutations.
|
|
A perpetrator's memory of the encounter is at least as prone to revision on retrieval.
|
|
Its geography makes Lagos especially prone to flooding, and the coastline has already been eroding.
|
|
The Cubs' hitters are more refined now, less prone to being exploited by elite arms.
|
|
It makes feedback less prone to distortions in our memory of how people have performed.
|
|
This makes for a beautiful yet fragile phone that is prone to picking up fingerprints.
|
|
They were also more prone to get into arguments with colleagues and to drink alcohol.
|
|
But are some families really prone to giving birth to one sex over the other?
|
|
So, you really have a market now that is less prone to these volatile excursions.
|
|
Cramer wants to stay out of the stock of enterprises that are prone to disruption.
|
|
Georgi's mother, Regina, a beautiful, delicate-featured woman prone to headaches, became withdrawn and depressed.
|
|
"The fast ones are more prone to injury because they give so much," he said.
|
|
Throughout the world in our own time, cities are more prone to disasters than ever.
|
|
The more élite these groups became, the more they were prone to furious doctrinal disputes.
|
|
A motorized camera is cool, but it's also prone to breakdown after a million selfies.
|
|
He did not mention Mr. Trump by name, although the president is prone to both.
|
|
Both describe her as a beautiful child, prone to trouble, and granted a formidable gift.
|
|
Ever since she was a child, she's been prone to visions of ghosts and spirits.
|
|
The president himself has been prone to such language at times, creating a whipsaw effect.
|
|
The person most in need of calming is her; she is prone to obsessive fretting.
|
|
Old magazines, like old movies, are prone to display the casual sexism of their day.
|
|
Like the left, the right now seems increasingly prone to define itself in cultural terms.
|
|
Do you think being incredibly wealthy makes you immune to corruption, or prone to it?
|
|
"He has sometimes used colorful language and has been prone to 'salesmanship,'" the statement said.
|
|
We're more prone to take risks on Thursday when action planet Mars trines regenerative Pluto.
|
|
There are better ways to increase transparency that would be less prone to mislead consumers.
|
|
They might also be prone to constipation, or have medication interactions that impact their appetite.
|
|
People who are already prone to violence might be drawn to violent music, Levitin explained.
|
|
Although rebels and loyalists were integrated, the army is deeply divided and prone to mutiny.
|
|
Baby Yoda is also missing her canine teeth, which is why she's prone to bleps.
|
|
These two ladies are definitely prone to shenanigans and Reggie isn't particularly interested in that.
|
|
Then, at the last moment, Apple bailed, possibly because the mat was prone to overheating.
|
|
Analysts said that the banking sector was prone to further weakness in the near term.
|
|
Or worse, they may make you more prone to doing something illegal, unethical or immoral.
|
|
For that reason, those new users are more prone to getting tricked by fake news.
|
|
A trip 22028 the hospital revealed I was epileptic & prone to seizures at any time.
|
|
Bitcoin's price is also prone to massive swings of several hundred dollars within a day.
|
|
Fezzik the giant is good-natured but not particularly self-aware and prone to violence.
|
|
Am I prone to envy or revenge, rage or lust, overblown confidence or secretive cowardice?
|
|
Since the murder rate in particular is generally low, it's prone to big statistical fluctuations.
|
|
For example, Bouchey said she was personally prone to anxiety around being late for appointments.
|
|
Since the murder rate in particular is generally low, it's prone to large statistical fluctuations.
|
|
And people in general are shitty and we are prone to all sorts of ugliness.
|
|
Emilia's father, more prone to romanticism than bookkeeping, has left the shop's finances a mess.
|
|
They are usually performed on larger dogs, since those are the breeds most prone to dysplasia.
|
|
If you're prone to random yogurt cravings, then I don't think the pods are for you.
|
|
Dr. Angela notes that everyone's different, and some people are more prone to UTIs than others.
|
|
But that's also not to say he'd be prone to let his team run over him.
|
|
And there's no single genetic mutation that will ever explain why someone is prone to depression.
|
|
The 23-year-old native of Corsicana, TX was prone to cheating and drinking too much.
|
|
In conversation he's voluble and excitable, prone to answering simple questions with a 45-minute response.
|
|
From a physics perspective, that means the baby is less prone to plunge heavy-head-first.
|
|
Today, nearly a month after her diagnosis, she's still weak, sleepy and prone to coughing fits.
|
|
Haitian officials said storm preparations were focused on the south, which is prone to devastating flooding.
|
|
Basically, people are prone to nastiness when they're online Sunday and Monday nights between 10 p.m.
|
|
It could be that areas with more guns are more prone to murder for other reasons.
|
|
Asian markets can be prone to sharp price swings, Churchouse told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Monday.
|
|
That means it's more prone to obstruction by things like crumbs from a bag of chips.
|
|
Children are also prone to the disease because they generally spend long periods of time outside.
|
|
The display proved to be particularly prone to scratches, an issue that has been reported elsewhere.
|
|
Italy has several active volcanoes and the region of Naples is relatively prone to seismic activity.
|
|
Whether you're prone to dryness, oiliness or are blessedly "normal," it's an area that deserves attention.
|
|
The drone was also prone to lose connection once it got more than 500 feet away.
|
|
He leaves as prone to gloom about Britain as he was to optimism when he started.
|
|
But it was too slow, clunky, and prone to failure to be of much practical use.
|
|
If you're someone who is highly prone to stultifying bouts of nervousness, don't beat yourself up.
|
|
The "uncivilized" parts of the world are full of emotional, irrational, tribal people prone to violence.
|
|
Cable companies, too, are self-interested and prone to resisting change that could hurt their businesses.
|
|
The Arctic sea ice cover is becoming thinner, younger and more prone to melting each summer.
|
|
Their men are prone to patrolling Baghdad's streets as religious police, much like Iran's hated basijis.
|
|
Widespread deforestation for fuel and farming makes the impoverished state prone to natural disasters, especially floods.
|
|
Imagine for a moment that you run a small country prone to outbreaks of sectarian violence.
|
|
Chinese dissidents in exile are prone to factious squabbles; they find it very hard to unite.
|
|
But late payers are still prone to abuse, especially if they have borrowed from shady people.
|
|
Lilly is sensitive and prone to anxiety, so I want to be as supportive as possible.
|
|
So are forecasts of it—the VIX is prone to spikes in anxious moments (see chart).
|
|
But Trump's suggestion that undocumented immigrants are more prone to commit acts of violence is false.
|
|
It is prone to making foolish economic decisions: witness the history of Argentina under the Peróns.
|
|
Finding all establishment candidates too prone to corruption, he hires his friends and family members instead.
|
|
The Southeast Asian country is prone to destructive storms and flooding due to its long coastline.
|
|
If a human was more prone to giving, that person was also more likely to receive.
|
|
Basically, where your molars are hard and white, mine are soft, brown, and prone to pain.
|
|
India's banks are still largely in state hands, still prone to lend to the well-connected.
|
|
Many areas in California are naturally hot, dry, and prone to fires much of the year.
|
|
Turbidites are often a result of earthquakes, but the Dry Tortugas are not prone to them.
|
|
Having a baby and being constantly sleep-deprived makes us both sensitive and prone to miscommunication.
|
|
The main reason it's used is because small children are prone to squirming in their chairs.
|
|
In May, Congress banned staffers from using Yahoo Mail because it was prone to ransomware attacks.
|
|
First, the capturing of "kingpins" has left gangs fragmented, undisciplined and prone to fighting among themselves.
|
|
There's a good body of research tying certain personality types to being prone to other addictions.
|
|
"Larger planets are thought to be more prone to flooding for two reasons," Simpson told Gizmodo.
|
|
It could've been spent on building an environment less prone to disaster in the first place.
|
|
People who travel regularly and people who remember their dreams are more prone to déjà vu.
|
|
Anecdotally, millennial women who inherit wealth are prone to firing the advisers who came with it.
|
|
"Trump is a special case because he's unusually prone to gain benefits from symbolism," Wood said.
|
|
This last criteria is the most prone to controversy, and the most difficult to get right.
|
|
Vietnam is prone to natural disasters, with floods and typhoons killing hundreds of people each year.
|
|
Foreign players perceive Brazilian port operators as less prone to facing roadblocks than other infrastructure segments.
|
|
The process is prone to introducing genetic errors, which results in many cloned offspring dying young.
|
|
Mevoli-the-competitor was reckless—"cowboyish" a friend said—prone to tantrums, sulks and self-excoriation.
|
|
But like his late idol Thompson, Depp can be prone to exaggeration, according to Rolling Stone.
|
|
The goal was to show that Trump supporters were extremists, prone to violence, a theme Mrs.
|
|
I was prone to fits of terror that led to rage that led to self-loathing.
|
|
It starts like chicken pox: The victim runs a high fever and is prone to vomiting.
|
|
Where common ownership rose the most in 2002-13, charges were also most prone to rise.
|
|
Could we ever make the internet, and computers, immune, or at least, less prone, to hacking?
|
|
I also do another face mask since my skin is really oily and prone to breakouts.
|
|
She said climate change and increased development of forest zones prone to wildfires caused the destruction.
|
|
But is it more prone to happen when the lesions are intact or after they've burst?
|
|
Instead of speaking out and seeking help, I'm prone to isolating myself from everyone I love.
|
|
He thought that people with more active sense of smell were more prone to psychological problems.
|
|
Privately, presidents ranging from Abraham Lincoln to Richard Nixon were prone to use off-color language.
|
|
I'm also prone to losing things, and I know I’m not alone in that.
|
|
Fast down the drag strip and prone to crash when burning out of Cars and Coffee.
|
|
You may also be prone to more bladder and yeast infections because of slow blood flow.
|
|
She's easily angered, and prone to protectively withdraw into herself when her feelings get too strong.
|
|
It also removed the self-moderating effect of frequent fire from a landscape prone to burn.
|
|
And when politics come into play, even the most adept negotiator may be prone to miscalculation.
|
|
She also added that her son is prone to "experiencing a meltdown" due to his diagnoses.
|
|
It is during this courting of investors that EB-5 is especially prone to marketing abuse.
|
|
As they age these pipes are prone to leeching lead, leakage, chemical infiltration and bacterial growth.
|
|
The bone structure also hints at the baby's demise — starvation in a region prone to droughts.
|
|
American politics has always been prone to single storyism — candidates reducing complex issues to simple fables.
|
|
Many studies support this idea, showing that testosterone-laden men are prone to overconfidence in trading.
|
|
Even successful people are prone to showcasing their wealth via cars, expensive clothes and lavish vacations.
|
|
I realize my preference for waterproof mascara means my lashes are much more prone to dryness.
|
|
Virtually inseparable, and prone to boyish humor, they refer to each other as Banksy and Wiggy.
|
|
It turns Christian, who is autistic, into a grim automaton mumbling gibberish and prone to tantrums.
|
|
"It's a feel-good drug, and we know people are prone to abuse it," he said.
|
|
And in a world flooded with information, we are especially prone to forgetting where ideas originated.
|
|
While financial stress can creep in anywhere, certain cities seem more prone to it than others.
|
|
He's prone to say whatever comes into his head, alternating between bracing honesty and complete outrageousness.
|
|
Its members are loving and supportive, but also prone to conflict over things small and large.
|
|
She's a voice of reason and honesty in a field where people are prone to shouting.
|
|
It stalls out during fermentation, is sensitive to temperature and alcohol, and prone to mood swings.
|
|
During the winter, most people's skin is more coarse or dry, and prone to breaking easily.
|
|
And for as long as I can remember, I've been almost supernaturally prone to negative emotions.
|
|
The dressers are "front heavy" and prone to tipping over if left unanchored, ABC News reports.
|
|
God forbid that our sportsmen or women could be fallible, prone to mistakes, susceptible to defeat.
|
|
Legend has it the warm gusts make people moody, violent, and prone to migraines or fights.
|
|
Turkey's location between the Arabian tectonic plate and the Eurasian plate renders it prone to earthquakes.
|
|
But the administration does not prevent people from visiting conflict zones and regions prone to kidnapping.
|
|
His sexless marriage has left the otherwise mild-mannered Southern gentleman prone to fits of rage.
|
|
Hydrogen in empty space is prone to radiate radio waves with a wavelength of 21 centimeters.
|
|
Nationalism, though once effective at rallying support, is increasingly difficult to control and prone to backfiring.
|
|
He and I are not the only reunion truthers prone to dramatic feelings about bass players.
|
|
Females produce just one foal per year and are prone to spontaneous abortions under stressful conditions.
|
|
" Such people are prone "to what the Norwegians call Stormannsgalskap, or the 'madness of great men.
|
|
In his spare time, he is a drinks historian more prone to wearing tuxedos and seersucker.
|
|
Pharaoh is prone to tantrums that can include hitting himself, screaming and ramming into his mother.
|
|
As prosecutors know, locking people up makes them more prone to committing offenses in the future.
|
|
The places on the planet where one plate meets another are the most prone to earthquakes.
|
|
However, that update changed the plane's aerodynamics and made it prone to stall in certain conditions.
|
|
Why should the F.A.A. continue to permit a system prone to going haywire aboard an aircraft?
|
|
A scarred skeleton showed Scotty lived a 'violent' life Scotty, it seems, was prone to fights.
|
|
A hair-trigger sensitivity to slights made him self-pitying and prone to a corrosive paranoia.
|
|
Most of them said that Mr. Edelstein is prone to sexually explicit language in the workplace.
|
|
For some people already prone to anxiety or clinical depression the toll can be even worse.
|
|
With enormous bodies that grow from a single cell, they should be particularly prone to tumors.
|
|
They remained calmer and less prone to excitability than new neurons in the inactive animals' brains.
|
|
His writing voice fell into a distinct rhythm, half-cocked and prone to fits of anger.
|
|
Mr. Glanville says he is often prone to distraction, which contributed to his struggles in class.
|
|
But differences in the way your body metabolizes drugs might render you prone to side effects.
|
|
But they are also more fragile, more flawed, more prone to error, more susceptible to pressure.
|
|
During his early tenure as national party leader he appeared ill informed and prone to errors.
|
|
It is meant to make it less corrupt, chaotic, personalized and thus prone to human error.
|
|
But, that doesn't mean that their memories are any more prone to errors than other people's.
|
|
But it could also make royal reporters even angrier and more prone to criticize the couple.
|
|
A basement, for example, is common in the suburbs, but could also be prone to flooding.
|
|
My inner teenager, that prone-to-shock kid, dangled visions of shells and fun lava pools.
|
|
Jakarta, which is prone to flooding, is one of the fastest-sinking cities in the world.
|
|
After the first hit, heavy rains pounded Mozambique's north, an area prone to floods and landslides.
|
|
Sierra Leone is prone to natural disasters, especially recurring floods and landslides, provoked by climate change.
|
|
Some people are prone to sadness, others to anger, and the occasional few to genuine cheerfulness.
|
|
Analysts said the market was prone to profit-taking following recent gains, although confidence was improving.
|
|
"We are all prone to the formation of false memories, independent of cannabis use," Ramaekers said.
|
|
She is more savvy and more sure of herself now, prone to long reflections on life.
|
|
But, since they keep production levels relatively low, the company can be prone to low inventory.
|
|
Such words from a financial authority are prone to be heard as a signal to stampede.
|
|
If where you live is prone to rainfall, the water can accumulate and lead to flooding.
|
|
Children exposed to lead are prone to attention deficiency, lower I.Q., learning disorders and criminal involvement.
|
|
I'm prone to breaking out on my chest and back because I work out a lot.
|
|
They&aposre also prone to making some big money mistakes that prevent them from building wealth.
|
|
Longer-acting drugs, such as Librium and Valium, may be less prone to withdrawal, he said.
|
|
Second, experts are prone to living their lives and practicing their crafts in narrowly defined cocoons.
|
|
Egyptian air crash investigations have a record of being slow, opaque and prone to political considerations.
|
|
Turkey is prone to earthquakes because it is located between the Arabian plate and Eurasian plate.
|
|
If this happens, it would result in catastrophic flooding in regions already prone to this hazard.
|
|
Grizzled and tormented, he's an outsider in his own home, prone to fury and sometimes violence.
|
|
On the playing field, hijabs are prone to unraveling, and they can be hot and unwieldy.
|
|
He fumbled words, missed chances, and, despite his best intentions, was prone to mishandling fragile things.
|
|
I was seeing a terrific artist, H., at least as prone to defiance as I was.
|
|
The machines were prone to detaching from the washing machine chassis, posing a risk of injury.
|
|
Plaintiffs claim Apple knew and concealed how the "butterfly" keyboards on MacBooks were prone to failure.
|
|
Trump is more prone to rely on military and commercial power in pursuit of those interests.
|
|
Data isn't immune to unconscious bias, but it's far less prone to it than our cognition.
|
|
Could it deter portfolio investors, people more prone to flee markets at the signs of instability?
|
|
Many Republicans remain at arm's length, fearful that the president is erratic and prone to offend.
|
|
Sadie and McKayla are catty, prone to jealousy, and quick to swoon before their male victims.
|
|
Middle-school students, said Cornell, are acutely status-conscious and particularly prone to tormenting one another.
|
|
Every day, our team discussed base security to identify where we were most prone to attack.
|
|
Moore, who is prone to incendiary comments on social and cultural issues, has survived controversy before.
|
|
Maybe America is just more prone to crime, say, because of income inequality or cultural differences?
|
|
I hate bulk, and I'm not prone to fumbling my smartphone and dropping it to the ground.
|
|
But, like most tablets, the glossy surface also means the screen is prone to messy fingerprint smears.
|
|
"Some families are prone to skin tags that can be present anywhere on the body," Parker says.
|
|
It can be used across patients of all different skin types, ranging from acne-prone to sensitive.
|
|
The steel industry is particularly prone to dumping because there is so much global demand for it.
|
|
Every profession is prone to the occasional bout of navel gazing, and graphic design is no exception.
|
|
Like any other pioneering YouTuber however, Mishler is prone to seeing the odd negative comment or two.
|
|
It can also personalize its reports based on whether you're prone to pollen allergies or frizzy hair.
|
|
But remember: Being divisive and prone to offensive comments never really stopped anyone from getting a job.
|
|
Those with a previous history of a mental health problem will be more prone to these effects.
|
|
Is the upsurge in mutations merely a secondary consequence of a repair process inherently prone to error?
|
|
He too had a temper, and was prone to rant when he was not happy about something.
|
|
In people with Coats disease, blood vessels behind the retina grow abnormally and are prone to bleeding.
|
|
In people with the condition, blood vessels behind the retina grow abnormally and are prone to bleeding.
|
|
" Swift is prone to declaring that criticism of these songs comes "from a place of such sexism.
|
|
Technology isn't perfect, and new technology (as any early adopter will tell you) is prone to bugs.
|
|
For all his bitterness and cutting remarks, he's still a British royal who is prone to homesickness.
|
|
After the incident, Moore couldn't focus and was prone to long pauses as he fumbled for words.
|
|
The U.S. economy is prone to a butterfly effect because the world economies are intertwined, Latif said.
|
|
Yes, anonymity also has its drawbacks in a social media world prone to harassment and hate speech.
|
|
He was a drug addict and he was prone to really irrational fits of violence and stuff.
|
|
But Davidson seems to be there simply because he's prone to controversy and makinga spectacle of himself.
|
|
The musical performance, however, was prone to mishaps, with some flashes of intensity but many inert stretches.
|
|
The campaign, prone to frequently using puns, has labeled the trip as the "Cruzin' to Caucus" tour.
|
|
Children who live at their schools are more prone to anxiety, depression and other mental-health problems.
|
|
The measles virus erases that memory, leaving the patient prone to catching the diseases all over again.
|
|
Others lamented that the aliens were "prone to violence" and "wedded to the worst forms of superstition".
|
|
Like the president's other forms of speech, his Twitter is grouchy, erratic, and prone to regular gaffes.
|
|
I think he is prone to drawing very stark contrasts when he's trying to make a point.
|
|
He recalled the old days when McCarthy drove the bus himself, although he was prone to distraction.
|
|
The metal bottom looks nice, but it does show fingerprints and is prone to scratching as well.
|
|
Quantum computers are hard to build, are prone to generating errors, and their components are often unstable.
|
|
If you're prone to dry patches, this can make them worse, so build up your tolerance slowly.
|
|
A lot of them do them in Excel and email, two processes that are prone to error.
|
|
But in fact, the northeastern Pacific is actually more prone to hurricanes than the Atlantic, Klotzbach says.
|
|
Perhaps that's why the study found that people who are more prone to making rash decisions — i.e.
|
|
As they are prone to do, users on Twitter dubbed Basset a queen — the highest online compliment.
|
|
That makes the sebaceous glands produce more oil, thus making skin more oily and prone to bumps.
|
|
He was also less prone to depart his teleprompter for ad libs that land him in trouble.
|
|
But Alexa, as found in the Echo and new Echo Show, is not prone to being explicit.
|
|
Xinhua said the earth was prone to collapse and measures had been taken to support the shaft.
|
|
These nodes rely on totally different technologies and protocols, many of which are prone to known attacks.
|
|
At least the vase itself will be waterproof, if a bit prone to melting during heat waves.
|
|
Critics say that the keyboards are unreliable, and prone to breaking when confronted with crumbs or dust.
|
|
Scharre worries that these systems are prone to design failures, hacking, spoofing, and manipulation by the enemy.
|
|
A new study of the phenomenon has found that North America is especially prone to speaking bull.
|
|
Machines whose algorithms are fallible and might be making rough guestimates, and/or prone to sensing malfunctions.
|
|
Trump is, just as Rudd's essay on the oath warns, inconsistent, fallible, and often prone to error.
|
|
They were prone to quarreling over Higgins' unresolved feelings for his season's second runner up JoJo Fletcher.
|
|
Since November 13, I'm a lot more indecisive and prone to mood changes than I was before.
|
|
Samsung's not the only company prone to overzealous promotion of its own products that lead to leaks.
|
|
The IRS literally has billions of records being managed by antiquated technology that's prone to data breaches.
|
|
Also prone to making racially insensitive and Islamophobic remarks, he makes the reactionary Mr Sessions seem moderate.
|
|
It's clear that some people are more prone to dishonesty than others — and are unlikely to change.
|
|