0 willing to accept or be influenced by a suggestion: --
1 willing to accept or be influenced by a suggestion: --
He was amenable to suggestion, and really worked hard to improve himself.
Thus, the eggs and beetles were classified as alive (viable) or dead, and the data were not amenable to statistical analysis.
At first blush this notion would seem to be much more amenable to a tenseless construal.
In contrast, internal sandhi cascades over morphemes within one word with complex retroflexions, and is not directly amenable to our euphony treatment.
The tribes, weakened by their deteriorating economic circumstances, needed the state's assistance and became more amenable to its patronage.
The mortality due to pneumonia is 10-50 times higher in the developing world and is therefore amenable to substantial improvement.
But the factors inhibiting more deliberative discussions - structural, cultural and motivational in nature - should be amenable to some change, particularly through education.
Second, once formulated, speaker stereotypes are amenable to strategic manipulation to the extent that they are consciously grasped by social actors.
Broiler houses operate on an all-in, all-out basis and are amenable to effective cleaning.