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The phrase "ability to embrace" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing someone's capacity to accept or adopt new ideas, changes, or challenges.
Example: "Her ability to embrace new technologies has made her an invaluable asset to the team."
Alternatives: "capacity to accept" or "skill in adopting".
Exact(60)
Our lost ability to embrace the "we" will be our downfall.
The swift adoption of vajayjay is not simply about pop culture's ability to embrace new slang.
Your determination to beat it and your ability to embrace life, despite hideous treatment, astounded me.
When growing anything, the most important skill to have is an ability to embrace the wonky.
Necessity has also given us another new skill - the ability to embrace change.
Mr. Scott appreciates the film's ability to embrace the subject it is parodying with commitment and sincerity.
Like Robert F. Kennedy, she taps into the state's ability to embrace new residents and fresh ideas.
Yet it systematically screens applicants for their ability to embrace and thus adapt to the company's hybrid culture.
Conservation projects are time sensitive, research funding is becoming restricted, and informed decisions depend on our ability to embrace integrative approaches to biodiversity science.
It demands mental courage and toughness: the ability to embrace the tiniest margins for error in the search for sensational rewards.
Mr. Brannaman's ability to embrace and surpass his own woundedness serves as a fulcrum for both his clinics and the film.
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