l, uh-men-uh-]
| 1. | ready or willing to answer, act, agree, or yield; open to influence, persuasion, or advice; agreeable; submissive; tractable: an amenable servant. |
| 2. | liable to be called to account; answerable; legally responsible: You are amenable for this debt. |
| 3. | capable of or agreeable to being tested, tried, analyzed, etc. |
a·me·na·ble (ə-mē'nə-bəl, ə-měn'ə-) adj.
[Probably alteration of Middle English menable, from Old French, from mener, to lead, from Latin mināre, to drive, from minārī, to threaten, from minae, threats; see men-2 in Indo-European roots.] a·me'na·bil'i·ty, a·me'na·ble·ness n., a·me'na·bly adv. |