[
UK
/mˌæləbˈɪlɪti/
]
[ US /ˌmæɫiəˈbɪɫəti/ ]
[ US /ˌmæɫiəˈbɪɫəti/ ]
NOUN
- the property of being physically malleable; the property of something that can be worked or hammered or shaped without breaking
How To Use malleability In A Sentence
- The malleability of identity itself proves a constant theme.
- Ideas when hammered gain malleability, acquire resilience and cease to be some kind of exotic rigid doctrine. India and the Sixties
- Our bodies make up in clairvoyance what they lose in malleability. THE CRASH OF HENNINGTON
- These images suggest that it is devoid of any characteristics in its own right (except those formal characteristics necessary to its role, such as malleability). Plato's Timaeus
- Because it is no consequence one way or the other from my complex idea: the necessity or inconsistence of malleability hath no visible connexion with the combination of that colour, weight, and fusibility in any body. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
- I see three important constituent elements of the digital realm becoming more evident every day: malleability, anonymity and connectivity.
- Utopianism in the eighteenth and nineteenth centu - ries was supported not only by a belief in the inevita - bility of progress, but also by the widely held doctrine of the malleability or perfectibility of human nature which implied that men's minds and characters could be quickly molded by education to be vastly, if not totally, different from what they were. UTOPIA
- Copper is valued for strength, malleability, ductility, and ability to conduct electricity and heat.
- Rental cars charlotte awhile for the swarthiness the apprehension of any azalea he has apraxic in a unmalleability or negligence anapsid, we are rectilineal at, bitingly, an nutrient huckster. Rational Review
- The softness and malleability of gold makes it perfect for making jewellery.