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.
Origin: 1590–1600; < Anglo-French, equivalent to Middle Frenchamen(er) to lead to (a-a-5 + mener < Late Latinmināre for Latinminārī to drive) + -able-able
1590s, "liable," from M.Fr. amener "answerable" (to the law), from à "to" + mener "to lead," from L. minare "to drive (cattle) with shouts," var. of minari "threaten" (see menace). Sense of "tractable" is from 1803, from notion of disposed to answer or submit to influence.