English to Malayalam Dictionary affinity

affinity

സംബന്ധം
definition
noun
he has an affinity for the music of Berlioz
a spontaneous or natural liking or sympathy for someone or something.
example
It seems that the dualistic language has an innate 'affinity' to directive speech acts (in a second-person perspective).
He had a natural 'affinity' with the tribe and would never miss an opportunity to be with them, interact with them and frequently get into discussions with them.
Shaped by the fastidious Harnoncourt, the central andante movement opens with a horn theme that whispers an 'affinity' to the Largo from the New World symphony.
a building with no 'affinity' to contemporary architectural styles
He was most at home when working on the land and had a natural 'affinity' with country people.
Early Carboniferous coral faunas of the block have a strong Eurasian 'affinity' , with two recognized coral faunas from two ecological facies having been recognized.
Peoples with no particular 'affinity' toward each other are bound together in a state that was largely externally created and not the outcome of local political processes.
She has a natural 'affinity' for the little-sister role, and has begun to follow Adrianne everywhere she goes.
When the divalent cation dissociates from actin, the 'affinity' of actin for nucleotide is greatly reduced.
Relational proximity is shaped by cultural 'affinity' and facilitated by spatial and institutional proximity.
Ten years later, the two women meet at their children's school and find that they have a natural 'affinity' for one another.
Some authors have suggested a close relationship between cycads and Lyginopteris, but most favor an 'affinity' to Medullosan seed plants.
Not surprisingly, we can see an 'affinity' to Warhol's early films in this series of paintings.
This dolphin later turned up in Grace Bay in 1980 and demonstrated a natural 'affinity' with people.
Use of the same island at the same time and the synchronization of seasonal and annual movements were not directly linked to any social 'affinity' between the two individuals.
As you say, you have no experience, but I have seen you with William and you appear to have a natural 'affinity' with children.
For someone with such an 'affinity' for the natural world, it's not surprising to discover that another passion of Baxter is conservation.
the bacterial proteins bind to these molecules with high 'affinity'
The provenance signature instead suggests that the Sta Series has a closer 'affinity' to the Northern Gneisses and may in a general sense represent a deformed cover sequence.
a semantic 'affinity' between two words
Croats also began to look to Serbs and other southern Slavs as people with whom they shared a linguistic and cultural 'affinity' .
He showed a special 'affinity' for the understanding and performance of the music of Rachmaninoff.
Teenagers have a natural 'affinity' with the colour black as it saves having to change clothes everyday and time spent on needlessly choosing which outfit to wear today.
They have a natural 'affinity' with traditional country music which is the kind I do in my show.
Dresser's style was never dictated by dogmatic theories, but had a general 'affinity' to the art of the early English Middle Ages and also suggested his admiration for Asian art.
Related to this notion of communal 'affinity' is ‘social closure’.
He also suggested that Polyzoniida may have a closer 'affinity' to Glomeridesmida than to the other colobognath taxa.
Our data do not pose any reason to suspect that we deal with gadolinium complexes of variable valence or that the 'affinity' of binding sites changes with their density or occupancy.
He was born with a natural 'affinity' for the outdoors: he loved the mountains and rivers, as well as the forests and farms, birds, insects, wolves and bears.
She had a natural 'affinity' with the country way of life and she relished the various tasks synonymous with the changing seasons.
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