Indispose [verb]

Definition of Indispose:

bother, trouble

Opposite/Antonyms of Indispose:


Sentence/Example of Indispose:

Spirits are decidedly prejudicial, and indispose to bodily exertion.

Is it true that these deformities, these warped, impaired, and dislocated constitutions indispose men to belief?

It is not now true that either climate or the habits of her people indispose them to manufactures.

The path now became steep and rather difficult; so much so, indeed, as to indispose them all to conversation.

Women, you know, are susceptible on these points; it might indispose her towards me, and lessen my chance.

It is matter of familiar remark that the tendency of warm climates is to relax the human constitution and indispose to labor.

The cause which inspired this appeal will indispose the candid reader to any criticism of its exuberant language.

The cause in which this document was written will indispose the candid reader to any criticism of its somewhat exuberant language.

We may now manage so to deal with the rest as to indispose them for further pursuit.

The sympathy manifested for this science at Montpellier was quite enough to indispose toward it the faculty of Paris.