amenable for/to• No suggestion was made that non-litigation costs were not amenable to being quantified by taxation.• These childbearingpatterns are amenable to control, given the knowledge and will.• But there is another side to the substance abuse equation that may make it less amenable to interventions.• Carbohydrate replenishment Your body is most amenable toreplenishingmuscle glycogen in those first few hours after exercising.• But others were both less recent and less amenable toresolution.• Claude Simon's fiction at this time is particularly amenable to the criteriaestablished by Ricardou.• There is no reasonwhy a contractual body performing public functions should not be amenable to these remedies.• But the biblicalmaterial may simply not be amenable to what they would say.
Originamenable
(1500-1600)Old Frenchamener“to lead up”, from mener“to lead”
VERBS | ADVERB | PREPOSITIONVERBS➤be, prove順從;證明易受影響➤seem似乎易受影響▸➤find sb/sth覺得⋯易受影響➤render sth使⋯易受影響ADVERB➤highly, most, particularly非常/十分/特別易受影響◇The manager was most amenable. Nothing was too much trouble.經理極好說話,什麼都沒太費勁。PREPOSITION➤to對⋯順從◇You should find him amenable to reasonable arguments.你會發現他容易接受合理的觀點。