English language

How to pronounce pronate in English?

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Type Words
Type of turn
Derivation pronation, pronator

Examples of pronate

pronate
Almost everyone pronates but when you run barefoot, you pronate much less.
From the smh.com.au
Some over-pronate, some suppinate, some are heel-strikers and some run on their toes.
From the stltoday.com
On the other hand, I don't pronate as much with orthotics, so I guess they are good for something.
From the well.blogs.nytimes.com
About 80 percent of runners pronate, which means the ankle drops inward as the foot strikes the ground.
From the thenewstribune.com
Speakers pronate their palms to signal power and certainty.
From the forbes.com
Inability to correctly pronate his wrist made it virtually impossible for him to predict movement of his fastball.
From the stltoday.com
What happens for him when he tries to overpower guys, his front shoulder opens up, his hands pronate and the ball sinks into the ground and ends becoming a nothing pitch.
From the news.enquirer.com
More examples
  • Turn the forearm or the hand so that the palm is directed downwards
  • (pronation) rotation of the hands and forearms so that the palms face downward
  • (Pronates) In anatomy, pronation is a rotational movement of the forearm at the radioulnar joint, or of the foot at the subtalar and talocalcaneonavicular joints.Kendall FP, McCreary EK and Provance PG. (1993).Muscles Testing and Function. 4th Edition. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. ...
  • (Pronated) The inward rolling of the foot or hand. If the wrist is in a pronated position the palm would be face down.
  • (Pronation) this is the rotation of the hand so that the palm faces posteriorly. This is not medial rotation as this must be performed when the arm is half flexed. Prone means the hand is facing posteriorly.
  • (Pronation) Rotating your forearm so the palm is down, or your body is lying face down. Also, when your foot is rotated inward not.
  • (Pronation) Moving of the forearm into a palm down position.
  • (Pronation) The natural inward rotation of the foot as it relates to the gait-cycle. A normal foot lands on the outside heel and pronates slightly to help absorb shock.
  • (Pronation) the position of the sword hand with the knuckles uppermost