The items include glibness and superficial charm,, grandiose self-worth, pathological lying, proneness to boredom and emotional vacuity. |
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Absorption is a personality trait associated with fantasy proneness, vivid imagery and so forth. |
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Psychological absorption is closely related to fantasy proneness and indeed, the two constructs might not be truly discriminable. |
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There was a proneness also in the new occupants to regard the natives as an irreclaimable race, and as inconvenient neighbours. |
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Alloying elements may have different effects on steel after tempering at the steel proneness to temper embrittlement. |
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The dish acquired a reputation for difficulty and proneness to accidents which it does not really deserve. |
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Our proneness to biobigotry, experts said, arises from several salient human traits. |
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However, since speeding is associated with higher accident proneness, ISA would typically be a safety measure. |
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But it is not clear which comes first — proneness to boredom, or the mood and behavior problems. |
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Of more immediate concern however was his proneness to stray from the marital bed. |
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Furthermore, in various studies it has repeatedly been found that speeding and accident proneness coincide. |
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To some realists, this epistemological monism seemed unable to give a satisfactory explanation of the mind's proneness to error. |
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His anxiety proneness seems less pronounced now than it was in 1985, but in spite of this he proved to be abnormally suggestible, compliant and acquiescent. |
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Ljungberg is key to Sweden's success at China 2007, but her proneness to injury is a concern to the coach. |
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Gly Ko Oil Skin Gel reduces and prevents folluculitis and helps to reduce the skin's proneness to acne. |
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Apparently procrastination proneness and goal failure have many of the same genetic influences. |
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The prevailing proneness of people to go along in accustomed ways gives the aspiring manager a chance to show his creative capacity. |
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For instance, a study by McGee and Newcomb provided consistent findings for problem behavior proneness across four developmental stages from early adolescence to adulthood. |
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They claim to expose actual or potential criminal behavior as well as deceitfulness, lack of self-control, violence proneness, and sociopathic tendencies. |
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When green cover is damaged, it leads to greater proneness to floods. |
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But strength may have little to do with Camby's proneness to injury. |
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Under-nutrition triggers an array of health problems like stunted growth, proneness to infections and worst of all mental retardation and cognitive impairment. |
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Set the value to parameter 4605 RUN TIME REQ based on knowledge and perception of the proneness to clogging in the actual application: the higher the proneness to clogging, the lower the value. |
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Long term deficiency are cataract of old age, cancer, low immunity, arthritis, proneness to bruising, varicose veins and hemorrhoids, and cardiovascular disease. |
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Some of the effects include impairment of vision or visual acuity, lengthened reaction time, overestimation of capabilities or an underestimation of errors, and a greater proneness to recklessness. |
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The new Declaration concerns the consequences which flow from the discovery of our genetic map: our physical characteristics, our proneness to genetic disease and our future health history may be discovered in our genes. |
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Combined, the presence of these two planets indicates a definite proneness in your personality to communicate your emotions, to have your way and to insist on your ambitions. |
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The non significance for severe events may be due to the small number of severe events in the trials and high degree of proneness of individuals who have one severe event to have others. |
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Although the programme has been centred on the Pacific for many years, there is of course no special regional significance to this, beyond the proneness of the region to earthquakes and hence to potential tsunami generation. |
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If this line of thought seems strange, it may be due to our unconscious human proneness to think of the triune God in terms of either modalism or tritheism. |
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The proneness of animals is opposed to the erect posture of human beings. |
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