MALLEABILITY in a Sentence
Learn MALLEABILITY from example sentences; some of them are from classic books. These examples are selected from a corpus with 300,000 sentences, including classic works and current mainstream media. Some sentences also link to their contexts.
10 example sentences for MALLEABILITY, such as:
1. Lead and tin are malleable metals.
2. Vanity, for example, made them all malleable.
3. Gold is a malleable metal, easily shaped into bracelets and rings.
4. When clay dries out, it loses its plasticity and becomes less malleable.
5. Europe saw its colonies as a source of raw material and a malleable workforce.
2. Vanity, for example, made them all malleable.
3. Gold is a malleable metal, easily shaped into bracelets and rings.
4. When clay dries out, it loses its plasticity and becomes less malleable.
5. Europe saw its colonies as a source of raw material and a malleable workforce.
Search Quotes from Classic Book Animal Farm by George Orwell |
Meanings and Examples of MALLEABILITY
Definitions: Search Google Search M.Webster
malleability
n. the property of being physically malleable; the property of something that can be worked or hammered or shaped without breaking
Classic Sentence:
1 I saw another at work to calcine ice into gunpowder; who likewise showed me a treatise he had written concerning the malleability of fire, which he intended to publish.
2 Her intentions in short had never been more definite; but poor Lily, for all the hard glaze of her exterior, was inwardly as malleable as wax.
3 She smiled as she spoke, letting her eyes rest on his in a way that took the edge from her banter and made him suddenly malleable to her will.
4 Vanity, for example, made them all malleable.
Example Sentence:
1 Actually, if we have malleability, migration can be easily implemented by first adding a new set of processor and then removing the old one.
2 Labor activists say that although there are no legal age cutoffs, the industries prefer to hire young and malleable workers.
3 Lead and tin are malleable metals.
4 Europe saw its colonies as a source of raw material and a malleable workforce.
5 Gold is a malleable metal, easily shaped into bracelets and rings.
6 When clay dries out, it loses its plasticity and becomes less malleable.