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congenitally
[ kuhn-jen-i-tl-ee ]
adverb
- since birth:
The study compares auditory reaction times between congenitally blind subjects and sighted control subjects.
- by nature:
The main character in the movie is a strikingly handsome and congenitally cheerful man.
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of congenitally1
Example Sentences
But it also seems like their candidate is congenitally incapable of viewing women as autonomous human beings.
Sawusch died as a result of two heart conditions, the pathologist concluded: dilated cardiomyopathy and a congenitally narrow coronary artery.
Michael's mistake was that Trump is congenitally asymmetrically loyal to people because he's such a narcissist that he treats everybody like an object in his field of vision.
Another compelling counterexample to the reorganisation argument is seen in a study of congenitally deaf cats, whose auditory cortex -- the area of the brain that processes sound -- appears to be repurposed to process vision.
Only the congenitally suspicious among us will automatically assume that it’s a logging-industry site scamming us while ravaging the landscape.
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