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    • Latin verb malleare

      • Malleable comes from the Latin verb malleare, meaning "to hammer." Malleare itself comes from the Latin word for "hammer," malleus.
      www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/malleable
  1. Malleable comes from the Latin verb malleare, meaning "to hammer." Malleare itself comes from the Latin word for "hammer," malleus. If you have guessed that maul and mallet, other English words for specific types of hammers, are related to malleus, you have hit the nail on the head.

  2. The earliest known use of the adjective malleable is in the Middle English period (11501500). OED's earliest evidence for malleable is from around 1395, in the writing of Geoffrey Chaucer, poet and administrator.

  3. Nov 9, 2018 · malleable. (adj.) late 14c., "capable of being shaped or extended by hammering or rolling," from Old French malleable and directly from Medieval Latin malleabilis, from malleare "to beat with a hammer," from Latin malleus "hammer" (from PIE root *mele- "to crush, grind").

  4. The adjective 'malleable' has its origins in the Latin word 'malleabilis,' which is derived from 'malleare,' meaning 'to hammer' or 'to beat into shape.' In Latin, 'malleabilis' described the quality of being easily shaped or molded through the application of force, often referring to metals that could be forged or hammered into different forms.

  5. British English. /ˌmaliəˈbɪlᵻti/ mal-ee-uh-BIL-uh-tee. U.S. English. /ˌmæl (j)əˈbɪlədi/ mal-yuh-BIL-uh-dee. /ˌmæliəˈbɪlədi/ mal-ee-uh-BIL-uh-dee. See pronunciation. Where does the noun malleability come from? Earliest known use. mid 1600s. The earliest known use of the noun is in the mid 1600s.

  6. Sep 13, 2024 · From Middle French malléable, borrowed from Late Latin malleābilis, derived from Latin malleāre (“to hammer”), from malleus (“hammer”), from Proto-Indo-European *mal-ni- (“crushing”), an extended variant of *melh₂- (“crush, grind”).

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  8. The adjective malleable dates back to Middle English, from Old French, from Medieval Latin malleābilis, from malleāre, "to hammer." Definitions of malleable. adjective. capable of being shaped or bent or drawn out. “ malleable metals such as gold” synonyms: ductile, pliable, pliant, tensile, tractile. formed. having or given a form or shape.

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