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  1. adjective. formal uk / ˈmjuː.tə.b ə l / us / ˈmjuː.t̬ə.b ə l / Add to word list. able or likely to change: the mutable nature of love. Language is not static, it is mutable. Synonym. changeable. Opposites. changeless literary. immutable formal. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. always becoming different.

  2. The meaning of MUTABLE is prone to change : inconstant. How to use mutable in a sentence.

  3. adjective. formal us / ˈmjuː.t̬ə.b ə l / uk / ˈmjuː.tə.b ə l / Add to word list. able or likely to change: the mutable nature of love. Language is not static, it is mutable. Synonym. changeable. Opposites. changeless literary. immutable formal. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. always becoming different.

  4. Something or someone that is mutable is subject to change. Mutable weather can go from sunny, to rainy and windy, and back to sunny again. The word mutable originally had a negative connotation, and it referred to a person, usually a poet, who frequently changed his mind and moods.

  5. Synonyms for MUTABLE: volatile, unpredictable, changeful, variable, unstable, inconsistent, changeable, mercurial; Antonyms of MUTABLE: immutable, constant, certain, stable, unchangeable, unchanging, predictable, invariable.

  6. Definition of mutable adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. given to changing; constantly changing; fickle or inconstant: the mutable ways of fortune. Synonyms: unsteady, unsettled, vacillating, unstable. Antonyms: stable. Computers. (in object-oriented programming) of or noting an object having properties whose values can change while the object itself maintains a unique identity. mutable. / ˈmjuːtəbəl /

  8. Definition of 'mutable' Word Frequency. mutable in British English. (ˈmjuːtəbəl ) adjective. 1. able to or tending to change. 2. astrology. of or relating to four of the signs of the zodiac, Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius, and Pisces, which are associated with the quality of adaptability. Compare cardinal (sense 9), fixed (sense 10)

  9. adj. 1. a. Capable of or subject to change or alteration. b. Prone to frequent change; inconstant: mutable weather patterns. 2. Tending to undergo genetic mutation: a mutable organism; a mutable gene. [Middle English, from Latin mūtābilis, from mūtāre, to change; see mutate .] mu′ta·bil′i·ty n. mu′ta·bly adv.

  10. the ability to change or the fact of being likely to change: He is interested in the mutability of identity, the way people can slip in and out of personas to fit the occasion. The social institution is not fixed, but has a degree of mutability. Fewer examples. A new generation of managers has accepted the constant mutability of the Internet.

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