Word of the Day for Tuesday May 3, 2005
labile \LAY-byl\, adjective: 1. Open to change; apt or likely to change; adaptable. 2. Constantly or readily undergoing chemical, physical, or biological change or breakdown; unstable.
They are too open to the rest of the world, too
labile, too prone to foreign influence.
--Robert Hughes, Goya
Mifflin may not have been much more
labile than the people around him, but he was undoubtedly more aware of his volatility.
--"Leander, Lorenzo, and Castalio," Early American Literature, January 1, 1998
Faber's prose is an amazingly
labile instrument, wry and funny, never pretentious, capable of rendering the muck of a London street and the delicate hummingbird flights of thought with equal ease.
--Lev Grossman, "The Lady Is a Tramp," Time, September 16, 2002
They lock themselves in their studies and from the
labile, rocking mass of thoughts and impressions they form books, which immediately become something final, irrevocable, as if frost had cut down the flowers.
--Adam Zagajewski, "History's children," New Republic, December 2, 1991
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Labile derives from Late Latin labilis, from Latin labi, "to slip."
LAURIE: OK, I'm labile.

If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animating contest of freedom, go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you,
S Adams