amenable
English
Etymology
From French as if *amenable, from amener (“to bring or lead, fetch in or to”), from a- + mener (“to lead, conduct”), from Late Latin mināre (“to drive”), Latin deponent minārī (“to threaten, menace”).
Adjective
amenable (comparative more amenable, superlative most amenable)
- Willing to respond to persuasion or suggestions.
- Willing to comply; easily led.
- 2020 August 4, Richard Conniff, “They may look goofy, but ostriches are nobody’s fool”, in National Geographic Magazine:
- The communal nature of ostriches may have made these birds more amenable to life in captivity.
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- Liable to be brought to account, to a charge or claim; responsible; accountable; answerable.
- (law) Liable to the legal authority of (something).
- decisions of the Boards of Appeal are amenable to actions before the Court of Justice of the European Communities
- (mathematics, of a group) Being a locally compact topological group carrying a kind of averaging operation on bounded functions that is invariant under translation by group elements.
Antonyms
Translations
willing to respond to persuasion or suggestions
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willing to comply with; agreeable
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liable to be brought to account, to a charge or claim; responsible; accountable; answerable — see liable, responsible, accountable, answerable
liable to the legal authority of (something)
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Further reading
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