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Look up: malleable

  1. malleable
    yielding easily shaped moldable adapting 
    Found on http://www.graduateshotline.com/list.htm

  2. Malleable
    Something which is malleable can be hammered into a new shape with out fracturing or returning to its original shape.
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/nol.php

  3. Malleable
    Formable or easily shaped.
    Found on http://www.leadminingmuseum.co.uk/Glossa

  4. Malleable
    Relates to the tenacity of a mineral. It means that a mineral slice will flatten when hit with a hammer. Copper is a good example.
    Found on http://www.quartznall.co.uk/glossery.htm

  5. Malleable
    Capable of being extended or shaped by hammering or rolling.
    Found on http://www.diracdelta.co.uk/science/sour

  6. malleable
    malleability. Compare with ductile. Capable of being hammered into sheets. Metals are typically malleable materials.
    Found on http://antoine.frostburg.edu/chem/senese

  7. malleable
    is white iron converted by heat treatment into a malleable product.. Category: Iron and steel industries • pig iron of composition suitable for production of white cast iron for malleabilizing Category: Iron and steel industries • cast iron is characteristically brittle and unworkable; this can be remedied to some extent by annealing which gives the product superficially so...
    Found on http://www.mijnwoordenboek.nl/definition

  8. Malleable
    Mal'le·a·ble adjective [ French malléable , from Late Latin malleare to hammer. See Malleate .] Capable of being extended or shaped by beating with a hammer, or by the pressure of rollers; -- applied to metals. Malleable iron , iron that is capable of extension or of being shaped under the hammer; decarbonized cast iron. See under Iron . -- Malleable ...
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/M/13

  9. malleable
    Capable of being extended or shaped by beating with a hammer, or by the pressure of rollers; applied to metals. Malleable iron, iron that is capable of extension or of being shaped under the hammer; decarbonised cast iron. See Iron. Malleable iron castings, articles cast from pig iron and made malleable by heating then for several days in the prese ...
    Found on http://www.mondofacto.com/facts/dictiona

  10. malleable
    (mal´e-ә-bәl) susceptible of being beaten out into a thin plate.
    Found on http://www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns

  11. Malleable
    • (a.) Capable of being extended or shaped by beating with a hammer, or by the pressure of rollers; -- applied to metals.
    Found on http://thinkexist.com/dictionary/meaning

  12. malleable
    malleable, malleability, malleableness 1. Capable of being shaped by being beaten or by pressure; a property of certain metals such as gold and silver. 2. Having the characteristics of being beaten out into a thin plate. 3. Having the property (possessed by certain substances, especially metals) of being deprived of form by hammering or pressure, without a tendency or capacity to re...
    Found on http://www.wordinfo.info/words/index/inf

  13. malleable
    Capable of being shaped by being beaten or by pressure; a property of certain metals such as gold and silver. [L. malleus, a hammer]
    Found on


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23 November 2009

This day in history:
At sixteen minutes past five on 23rd November 1963, a British television institution was born. Doctor Who would go on to become the longest-running science-fiction programme in the world, eventually spawning twenty six seasons of adventures from 1963 to 1989. In total, eight actors have played the part of Gallifrey's most famous Time Lord. From the very first - William Hartnell in 1963 - to the very last - Paul McGann, in the 1996 TV Movie - the Doctor has wandered through time and space in his trusty time machine, an old type-40 TARDIS (Time and Relative Dimensions in Space). Although appearing to be nothing more than a battered blue police box, it is in fact vastly bigger on the inside than on the outside, and always departs with its familiar wheezing, groaning sound. read more

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