Online Google Dictionary

malleable 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Adjective
/ˈmalyəbəl/,/ˈmalēə-/,
Font size:

(of a metal or other material) Able to be hammered or pressed permanently out of shape without breaking or cracking,
  1. (of a metal or other material) Able to be hammered or pressed permanently out of shape without breaking or cracking

  2. Easily influenced; pliable
    • - Anna was shaken enough to be malleable

  1. ductile: easily influenced
  2. ductile: capable of being shaped or bent or drawn out; "ductile copper"; "malleable metals such as gold"; "they soaked the leather to made it pliable"; "pliant molten glass"; "made of highly tensile steel alloy"
  3. (malleability) the property of being physically malleable; the property of something that can be worked or hammered or shaped without breaking
  4. Ductility is a mechanical property that describes the extent in which solid materials can be plastically deformed without fracture.
  5. (Malleability (cryptography)) Malleability is a property of some cryptographic algorithms. An encryption algorithm is malleable if it is possible for an adversary to transform a ciphertext into another ciphertext which decrypts to a related plaintext. ...
  6. Able to be hammered into thin sheets; capable of being extended or shaped by beating with a hammer, or by the pressure of rollers; Flexible, liable to change
  7. (malleability) The quality or state of being malleable; The property by virtue of which a material can be extended in all directions without rupture by the application of load; a material's ability to be bent, formed, or shaped without cracking or breaking
  8. (malleability) A mineral's ability to be hammered into thin sheets.
  9. (Malleability) The property that determines the ease of deforming a metal when the metal is subjected to rolling or hammering. The more malleable metals can be hammered or rolled into thin sheet more easily than others.
  10. (Malleability) Capacity for undergoing deformation in all directions, usually cold deformation by hammering or squeezing.
  11. (Malleability) The formability, or responsiveness, of heated metal when being shaped.
  12. (Malleability) The ability of a material to undergo large permanent deformation in compression or property which enables a material to be beaten or rolled into thin sheets. This property is important in metalworking. Gold is the most malleable metal followed by aluminium.
  13. (Malleability) The capacity of a metal to have its shaped changed without loosing its physical integrity (breaking, tearing, shearing, etc.).
  14. (Malleability) can be bent or made into sheets
  15. From the Latin 'malleare', to hammer, the quality of metal that allows it to be easily shaped or formed, by hammering or through pressure.
  16. This term indicates that a metal or alloy is easily worked by hand or other tools.
  17. The property of metals being deprived of form, accepting deformation under pressure, hammering or rolling without breaking.
  18. A term applied to a metal capable of being beaten or rolled in all directions without breaking or cracking. Since the molecules of the metal must remain locked to each other during the beating or rolling, a malleable metal must exhibit a high degree of structural plasticity. ...
  19. Term used to describe metal or another substance that can be hammered, shaped or bent without breaking. Also referred to as Ductile.
  20. Capable of being shaped or formed into thin sheets without cracking. Materials can be rolled, hammered, molded, or stamped to achieve the desired effect. (top)
  21. Literally, cabable of being worked by hammering, so that the material's shape can be extended by the application of mechanical force without breakage.  This shape change should be permanent.  Some materials must be heated to have this property.  A more modern term is plasticity.
  22. process used to change the shape or form of metals or alloys
  23. Something that be shaped in its solid form.
  24. Meaning a material that can have its shape altered by hammering or rolling; Common in Metals.
  25. easily changed and controlled by other forces