0 used to refer to a mental or physical characteristic that someone has from birth: --
1 possessed as a characteristic from birth: --
The relevant facts simply fall out without the need for either an inborn principle or exposure to sentences that directly illustrate structure dependence.
She might have an inborn talent for the piano, or she might be all thumbs.
This could possibly have been some inborn error of metabolism, given the metabolic acidosis and previous maternal history, and therefore a non-immune hydrops.
It is another proof, if any is needed today, that the main and decisive aspects of human reactions are conditioned and are not inborn.
These characteristics, he further maintained, are in general a complicated product of inborn structure, the genetically determined course of maturation, and past experience (p. 27).
Two reviews (newborn screening for cystic fibrosis, newborn screening for inborn errors of metabolism) resulted in the provision of new funding for the technologies.
There is a possibility of a type of alcoholism resulting from an inborn metabolic deviation, with nothing firm to go on.
This linguistic argument runs: children would not be able to learn a grammar unless they were endowed with inborn linguistic constraints.