Ductile in a sentence as an adjective

Iron is fairly ductile, but those stresses will add up.

For example:* Gold is the most maleable and ductile of all the metals.

Even the magma itself isn't liquid, just ductile solid.

Chomsky may have a more ductile view on ownership, when it applies to means of production.

Hold it above that temperature by 80 degrees, and it won't hold an edge, although it will be ductile.

The first scientific work on ductile-brittle transition is from the 1920s, years after the Titanic.

It's fungible, ductile, rare and essentially impossible to forge.

We build modified steering knuckles for trucks that provide additional lift height, but out of ductile iron in a cast mold, same as OEM specs/mfg process.

Several countries have kept a reserve of gold for centuries, but probably not out of a fear that they will suddenly need a bunch of ductile metal.

From Wikipedia: "Gold is the most malleable and ductile of all metals; a single gram can be beaten into a sheet of 1 square meter, or an ounce into 300 square feet.

Boeing learned some hard and expensive lessons having to do with the complications around contracting out parts of a plane made from a much less ductile material.

I understood that you need at least 3 layers forged together to make a high quality knife; two relatively soft and ductile stainless alloys sandwiching a fairly brittle but hard stainless alloy.

This is because low temperature ultrasonic welding can be done reliably between gold and aluminum, and because gold and aluminum are ductile enough that they act as a cushion during the welding process to prevent oxide cracking.

Ductile definitions

adjective

easily influenced

See also: malleable

adjective

capable of being shaped or bent or drawn out; "ductile copper"; "malleable metals such as gold"; "they soaked the leather to made it pliable"; "pliant molten glass"; "made of highly tensile steel alloy"

See also: malleable pliable pliant tensile tractile