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View synonyms for mutability

mutability

[ myoo-tuh-bil-i-tee ]

noun

  1. the quality of being liable to undergo change or alteration:

    With the realization of cancer's mutability, they now fear it might not be the same disease in everyone.

  2. the quality of constantly changing; transient or transitory quality:

    National borders can have a permanence that contrasts with the almost infinite mutability of the cultures contained within them.

  3. Computers. (in object-oriented programming) the characteristic of an object having properties whose values can change while the object itself maintains a unique identity:

    The mutability of the "sales report" object allows properties like sales period and salesperson to be updated without losing the reference to the report elsewhere in the application.



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Other Words From

  • hy·per·mu·ta·bil·i·ty noun
  • hy·per·mu·ta·ble·ness noun
  • non·mu·ta·bil·i·ty noun
  • non·mu·ta·ble·ness noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of mutability1

First recorded in 1400–50; from French mutabilité, from Latin mūtābilitāt-, stem of mūtābilitās “changeability,” equivalent to mūtābili(s) “changeable” ( mutable ( def ) ) + -tās -ty 2( def )
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Example Sentences

The effect is of a delirious mutability, in which the poems coalesce almost in spite of themselves.

I think there’s a certain theme of mutability.

At one point, as I was peppering him with questions about his mutability, he gestured to consumers throughout the store.

As Hobbs has argued, the mutability of racial self-identification open to racially ambiguous people “reveals the bankruptcy of the race idea” while “offering a searing critique of racism” and “disarming racialized thinking.”

The subjects’ mutability echoes the local artist’s slippery style, which incorporates collage and shifts easily from realism to expressionism.

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mutmutable