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be amenable to造句
1. Such conditions may be amenable to medical intervention. 2. She'll be amenable to any sensible suggestions. 3. But the biblical material may simply not be amenable to what they would say. 4. Some will not be amenable to long-distance synchronizations. 5. She will be amenable to any sensible suggestions. 6. I'm sure she be amenable to any sensible suggestions. 7. The parents might also be amenable to a discussion of the "family bed" idea. 8. JavaFX was designed to be amenable to the "lambda" language feature planned for Java SE 8. 9. Data access technologies should be amenable to this separation of concerns. 10. I hope he will be amenable to reason, but if he cuts up rough I'll threaten him with legal action. 11. It is thought that Chinalco would be amenable to a watered - down version of its convertible bond. 11. Wish you can benefit fromand make progress everyday! 12. And what do we know about childhood determinants of adult disorder which might be amenable to preventive intervention? 13. There is no reason why a contractual body performing public functions should not be amenable to these remedies. 14. When our experimental tools are less blunt, such questions will be amenable to empirical study. 15. If private persons undertook propaganda they would do it at their own risk and be amenable to the laws of the country in which they acted. 16. These observations suggest that the mutated tyrosine phosphatases are tumor suppressor genes, regulating cellular pathways that may be amenable to therapeutic intervention. 17. This sub-wavelength displacement of the image of the source should be amenable to experimental observation with contemporary nanoscale-precision techniques. 18. Mammals are more complex still, but even they might be amenable to this sort of extinction modeling. 19. Some systems, especially those that involve the integration of custom hardware with software, may not be amenable to using Small Releases. 20. What they failed to recognise was that their own, taken-for-granted, "lack" of belief might itself be amenable to inquiry.