0 a feeling of not wanting to do something:
[ + to infinitive ] I have a strong disinclination to do any work.
But it becomes clear that this is not the only - perhaps not even the main reason - for her disinclination for public poetry.
They give readers things to ponder, rather than solutions - which reflects the authors' disinclination to create rigid and unrealistic category boundaries.
This disinclination gathers strength in proportion to the aesthetic distance opened up when we pull the text and the music apart for separate inspection.
I have not noticed any disinclination to bite when their victim is stationary, as noted by some.
Education and the allure of urban life were together responsible for the growing disinclination to engage in agricultural work on the part of the young.
The use of 'actual or predicted', no doubt, makes but a grudging concession to the changing reality and shows a disinclination to face facts.
The disinclination of individuals to join organized groups operating on their behalf leads to the primary insight of incentive theory.
There were abundant examples of the high command's disinclination to respond to societal pressures.