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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
innate
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
an inherent/innate tendency (=one that you are born with, which will not change)
▪ When attacked, some people have an inherent tendency to fight back.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
ability
▪ The differences in organisation are said to be due to innate ability, and the kind of experience received.
▪ Luckily, she had an innate ability to quickly judge people-if they were honest, loyal, tricksters or leeches.
sense
▪ The Doctor appeared to have an innate sense of direction.
▪ Shaftesbury thought the opposite true: religion follows from, or is grounded in, man's innate sense of morality.
▪ A modest and sincere man, his indefatigable hard work and innate sense of justice made him popular with his workforce.
▪ He seldom stopped smiling and never lost his innate sense of fun.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Children have an innate curiosity about the physical world.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Innate

Innate \In"nate\ ([i^]n"n[asl]t or [i^]n*n[=a]t"; 277), a. [L. innatus; pref. in- in + natus born, p. p. of nasci to be born. See Native.]

  1. Inborn; native; natural; as, innate vigor; innate eloquence.

  2. (Metaph.) Originating in, or derived from, the constitution of the intellect, as opposed to acquired from experience; as, innate ideas. See A priori, Intuitive.

    There is an innate light in every man, discovering to him the first lines of duty in the common notions of good and evil.
    --South.

    Men would not be guilty if they did not carry in their mind common notions of morality, innate and written in divine letters.
    --Fleming (Origen).

    If I could only show, as I hope I shall . . . how men, barely by the use of their natural faculties, may attain to all the knowledge they have, without the help of any innate impressions; and may arrive at certainty without any such original notions or principles.
    --Locke.

  3. (Bot.) Joined by the base to the very tip of a filament; as, an innate anther.
    --Gray.

    Innate ideas (Metaph.), ideas, as of God, immortality, right and wrong, supposed by some to be inherent in the mind, as a priori principles of knowledge.

Innate

Innate \In*nate"\, v. t. To cause to exit; to call into being. [Obs.] ``The first innating cause.''
--Marston.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
innate

early 15c., from Late Latin innatus "inborn," past participle of innasci "to be born in, originate in," from in- "in" (see in- (2)) + nasci "to be born" (Old Latin gnasci; see genus). Related: Innately.

Wiktionary
innate
  1. 1 Inborn; native; natural; as, innate vigor; innate eloquence. 2 Originating in, or derived from, the constitution of the intellect, as opposed to acquired from experience; as, innate ideas. See a priori, intuitive. 3 (context botany English) Joined by the base to the very tip of a filament; as, an innate anther. v

  2. To cause to exist; to call into being.

WordNet
innate
  1. adj. not established by conditioning or learning; "an unconditioned reflex" [syn: unconditioned, unlearned] [ant: conditioned]

  2. being talented through inherited qualities; "a natural leader"; "a born musician"; "an innate talent" [syn: natural, born(p), innate(p)]

  3. present at birth but not necessarily hereditary; acquired during fetal development [syn: congenital, inborn, inherent]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "innate".

The laws which excuse, on any occasions, the ignorance of their subjects, confess their own imperfections: the civil jurisprudence, as it was abridged by Justinian, still continued a mysterious science, and a profitable trade, and the innate perplexity of the study was involved in tenfold darkness by the private industry of the practitioners.

Although Zeb never got beyond eighth grade, he had an innate understanding of the best way to bilk a sucker.

Most leviathans had an innate primal fear of the rays, so that even they avoided being gored or envenomed, and even the larger ships often panicked and quit the field.

Not with teeth or claws, but by the much slower poison of leaching your innate free claim to existence.

With the innate lordliness of a brother he already put it down to jealousy.

John, with his innate niggardliness, at once seized this opportunity for disembarrassing himself of an importunate beggar by saddling the county with him.

His intolerance, his innate bad manners, his vain insistence that he had produced a final doctrine to put beside Darwinism, cast a long shadow of impatience and obduracy upon the subsequent development of Communism.

The story of German life during this interval is a rowdy and unhappy story--a story of faction fights and street encounters, demonstrations and counter-demonstrations, of a complicating tyranny of blackmailing officials, and at last of an ill managed and unsuccessful war, that belied the innate orderliness of the Teutonic peoples.

The doctrine of innate human depravity is one of the most paralysing dogmas that human fear invented or priestcraft encouraged.

I lived in was a terrible one, and as a psychographic historian I realized that the war, poverty, and tyranny which cursed us were not due to any innate evil in man, but to simple cause and effect.

And doing my work well, the innate justice of the men, assisted by their wholesome dislike for a clawing and rending wild-cat ruction, soon led them to give over their hectoring.

I remained there for several years before the revolution began in 1789, and that is when I became aware of the innate problems eating away at the French monarchy and the seigneurial system.

Behind him he heard some of the others stirring, roused by his quiet speech to Teyle, or perhaps by some innate sense of danger such as had roused the Cimmerian.

This arrangement proceeded from an innate love of mischief in Joel, who had much of the quiet waggery, blended with many of the bad qualities of the men of his peculiar class.

Part of their innate honesty that was part of the core of their society was that Wolfen could not lie.