We have no meanings for "peculiarly susceptible" in our records yet.
1 Bribery and Corruption;-GermanPatent Policy.-Thedyeing industry was peculiarly susceptible to corruption.
2 The Norse boy's nature was sensitive, and peculiarly susceptible of outward influences.
3 And have I not found myself peculiarly susceptible of this healing influence?
4 Her delicate organization and creative imagination rendered her peculiarly susceptible of pleasurable emotion.
5 You're peculiarly susceptible to the physical power of a brutal lover.
6 But old Mr. Caldigate was a man peculiarly susceptible to such hard judgments.
7 The Negro, however, seems to be peculiarly susceptible to this class of ailments.
8 Open-hearted for truth, she was peculiarly susceptible at that time to the claims of Adventism.
9 All minds genuinely poetical are peculiarly susceptible to movement,-thatis, to the excitement of numbers.
10 England saw herself threatened with invasion,- amenaceto which her people have been peculiarly susceptible .
11 All is solvent, plastic, peculiarly susceptible to external influences.
12 The Negro has elements in his nature that make him peculiarly susceptible to religious training.
13 Lumley, whose mind, although untouched by associations, was peculiarly susceptible to sweet sounds, sat entranced.
14 This they unfortunately communicated to the Esquimaux, who seemed to be peculiarly susceptible of the disease.
15 The negro race is peculiarly susceptible to hallucinations.
16 Although academics are great at talking about academic freedom, they are peculiarly susceptible to peer group pressures.
Other examples for "peculiarly susceptible"
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This collocation consists of: Peculiarly susceptible through the time
Peculiarly susceptible across language varieties