10 example sentences using labile.
Labile used in a sentence
Labile in a sentence as an adjective
The boundary between childhood and adulthood is labile and varies from person to person.
I would be old crappy man, and will be psychologically labile since there would be so much young people around me living a much longer "young" life as I did. I don't want imagine how this feels like.
We may have passed the peak of job mobility, but it's far more labile now than it was in the 60/70s and earlier, especially if you're female.
' in the Journal for the Education of the Gifted, demonstrating just how labile 'giftedness' is.
In that time while it is labile, details can be added or removed and changes can creep into it from your own thoughts or the suggestions of others.
There are other shades of depression in which emotion is, if anything, severely heightened and labile.
These indicate larger pools of total, labile, and microbial biomass C and a higher proportion of soil total and labile C as microbial biomass.
There's a lot of evidence that shows that memory recall is a destructive process: after recall, a memory becomes labile and must be reconsolidated into long-term storage.
Common manifestations are wandering, irritability and labile affect, leading to crying, outbursts of unpremeditated aggression, or resistance to caregiving.
'' ... Alberti expounded a methodology for artists akin to the preparation of an oration and thereby laid the foundations for what became the academic tradition in art down to the 19th century....Alberti determined to become an engineer like Brunelleschi and observes that the word engineer derives from the Latin ingenium, or brilliance of intellect, as well as ingenia, the weapons or devices that an engineer created....The picture that emerges here is of a scholar-actor, subtle and labile, who marshalled his knowledge of antiquity and his creative talents to forge a new role for himself as adviser to artists and power brokers alike.
Labile definitions
(chemistry, physics, biology) readily undergoing change or breakdown
liable to change; "an emotionally labile person"