suggestible

English

Etymology

suggest + -ible

Adjective

suggestible (comparative more suggestible, superlative most suggestible)

  1. Susceptible to influence by suggestion.
    • 2012, Anne M. Ridley; Fiona Gabbert; David J. La Rooy, Suggestibility in Legal Contexts, John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, page 1992:
      In Europe, through his clinical and forensic work, Gisli Gudjonsson noted that some individuals seemed to be more suggestible than others. This approach assumed that suggestibility is a trait and led to the development of a model of interrogative suggestibility (Gudjonsson & Clark, 1986).

Translations

Catalan

Etymology

From the stem of suggestió.

Pronunciation

Adjective

suggestible (masculine and feminine plural suggestibles)

  1. suggestible

Derived terms

  • suggestibilitat

Further reading

French

Etymology

suggestion + -ible

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /syɡ.ʒɛs.tibl/

Adjective

suggestible (plural suggestibles)

  1. suggestible
    La suggestion posthypnotique a augmenté l'adhésion chez les participants hautement suggestibles.
    (please add an English translation of this usage example)

Coordinate terms

Derived terms

Further reading

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