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susceptive
[ suh-sep-tiv ]
susceptive
/ ˌsʌsɛpˈtɪvɪtɪ; səˈsɛptɪv /
Derived Forms
- susceptivity, noun
Other Words From
- sus·cep·tiv·i·ty [suhs-ep-, tiv, -i-tee], sus·ceptive·ness noun
- nonsus·ceptive adjective
- nonsus·ceptive·ness noun
- nonsus·cep·tivi·ty noun
- unsus·ceptive adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of susceptive1
Example Sentences
“We live in an era where politics overtakes analytics, and while the court is less susceptive, it’s not impervious to that,” Amar said.
Plato and Pythagoras and Xenocrates and Chrysippus, following the ancient theologians, say that d�mons are stronger than men and far excel us in their natural endowment; but the divine element in them is not unmixed nor undiluted, but partakes of the soul's nature and the body's sense-perception, and is susceptive of pleasure and pain, while the passions which attend these mutations affect them, some of them more and others less.
He is quiet and thoughtful: it is true it costs some trouble to kindle him up to the point of clear utterance; but probably there never was any one more susceptive of the work of other people.
The assembled company seeming disinclined to respond, she repeated her inquiry to Collier Pratt himself, as with the susceptive grace that characterized all his movements, he swung the compress he was carrying sharply to and fro to preserve its temperature in transit.
But we are also persuaded, that as mere men, and out of this seat of rigorous justice, you are susceptive of the tender passions, and too humane not to commiserate the unhappy situation of those, whom the law sometimes, perhaps—exacts—from you to pronounce upon.
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