amenable

تیار
definition
adjective
parents who have had easy babies and amenable children
(of a person) open and responsive to suggestion; easily persuaded or controlled.
example
And, sometimes, the one obstruction to an 'amenable' compromise is yet another rule-book that someone somewhere imagined would be helpful.
What is not to be regretted is the passing of the typewriter: it was the least 'amenable' tool, requiring such a tedious process to make corrections that it encouraged writers to leave imperfect work unamended.
It was hoped by employers that the new working class would be more docile and 'amenable' than the old.
It has the reputation of being 'amenable' and friendly.
He has several ideas on making the city more 'amenable' for pedal pushers.
Not that that will worry the 26-year-old Swede, who, despite a speech disability, is as 'amenable' and communicative as Webb is often abrasive.
They'll find me pretty 'amenable' if we're winning.
The company must negotiate the planning departments of many UK local councils, and Howes diplomatically suggests that some are more 'amenable' than others.
A more 'amenable' strategy, I believe, is to accept that ‘believing is belonging’ and to be more inclusive rather than exclusive in our approach.
The cry to abolish intoxicating liquors increased within the 'amenable' audience of hard-working farmers that were money conscious and trying to make it in a new world.
Visibly thrilled over his visit, Sreejaya says that contrary to apprehension that he would be cold and remote, the Prince came across as a very 'amenable' and caring person.
The ladies have been very 'amenable' so far, some of them spoke out at the meeting, stood up and identified themselves and asked questions.
And, if the law needed to be changed, she believed Justice Minister Michael McDowell was 'amenable' .
And he came at that time to provide the assistance that I was telling you about before, and at that time he was quite an 'amenable' fellow.
The forcefulness of his stand-up comedy and righteousness of his political writing make it easy to forget that the fortysomething father of two is a good-natured, funny and 'amenable' bloke.
For me, the great appeal to doing an album was that the medium is 'amenable' - you can actually do it yourself.
Polls suggest that, in these increasingly health-obsessed and conformist times, public opinion might also now be 'amenable' .
Therefore our interest in a publicly neutral chairperson is solely focused on creating the most 'amenable' context for conducting the discussion.
He has always been very 'amenable' about having things done to him and he seems to know it is good for him.
Supt Hussey had always been co-operative, diligent and 'amenable' in his work, she said.
Beech is usually quite 'amenable to' hard cutting back, as long as it gets plenty of light it will quickly sprout new shoots from the older wood.
For example, the vexed problem of alcohol abuse is argued by some to be 'amenable to' outside intervention.
Nor is the exercise upon which the court is engaged 'amenable to' such an answer.
The reality is that for obvious reasons the continuing gangland carnage is not readily 'amenable to' ordinary law.
Instead, it is employed as a resource for stabilizing defendants, particularly during the early phases of treatment, and for increasing 'amenability' to treatment.
Lots more people would hear what you had to say if you'd just be 'amenable to' how we'd like to read your sites.
His blandness makes him an 'amenably' malleable subject for a novelist, and Sten Nadolny has taken full advantage of this licence.
Very few web sites are not 'amenable to' this way of thinking.
The survival of political machines usually rested on the 'amenability' of federal supervisors.
It was this Jesuit 'amenability' to incorporating pre-existing non-Christian beliefs and practises in their efforts at conversion that was causing Rome in this same period to censure the order in India and China.
Credits: Google Translate