Sentence examples for amenable to each from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(1)

The phrase "amenable to each" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing the willingness or openness of individuals or groups to accept or agree to something collectively.
Example: "The committee's proposal was amenable to each member's suggestions, ensuring everyone felt heard."
Alternatives: "receptive to all" or "open to everyone".

Exact(1)

We addressed the heterogeneity between studies by defining specific study questions amenable to each type of study, which resulted in three groups.

Similar(59)

If we made an effort to understand our differences rather than attack differences we would be more amenable to valuing each other.

We further explored the unadjusted association between the average annual change in NHS allocation and mortality amenable to healthcare in each local authority.

Each £1.00 of additional NHS resource allocated to the most deprived areas was associated with greater absolute improvements in mortality amenable to healthcare than each £1.00 of additional NHS resources invested in more affluent areas.

The observation by Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli Jr. that federal immigration law is "exceedingly delicate and complex," replete with foreign policy implications and not amenable to blunderbuss treatment by each of 50 states, was met with skepticism, as was his insistence that the federal government needs to be able to set its own enforcement priorities.

The modular polyketide synthases are particularly amenable to this approach, because each cycle of chain extension is catalyzed by a different module of enzymes, and the modules are arranged within giant multienzyme subunits in the order in which they act.

The implicit thinking is that living systems are built from a limited number of standard parts, each amenable to standard formal models and that interactions between levels are encoded in the lower levels.

This is done to ensure that the data is on a scale that is amenable to clustering, and so that each metric has a similar weight and contribution to the clustering.

Image cytometry techniques can accommodate most staining techniques developed for flow cytometry, and are amenable to automatic sample preparation because each solution-phase reaction can be carried out in place, where cells are fixed on, using a liquid handling system.

Among the 79 donor genomes (246,045 genes in total) analyzed (Sorek et al. 2007), 14 genomes are amenable to statistical analysis because they each contain at least 30 so-called nontransferable genes.

Before the development of high-throughput methods, capillary-based counter-diffusion methods were not uncommon, but these methods were not amenable to high-throughput screening because each experiment had to be set up one by one in single capillaries, in addition to the significant amount of protein sample required.

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