| 释义 | 
		pliantpli‧ant /ˈplaɪənt/ adjective    pliantOrigin: 1300-1400 Old French present participle of plier;  ➔ PLIERS  - Limbs pliant, reason suspended, she lay in a universe where nothing mattered except that he should not stop.
 - Mr Gorbachev has three instruments that, he hopes, will make the press more pliant while falling short of complete censorship.
 - She sat rigidly, shaking, incapable of anything other than being there, pliant in his hands.
 - The joints of his limbs were so pliant and flexible that he seemed much more like one asleep than dead.
 - Their skin feels like day-after-death skin, cold and hard though still faintly pliant.
 - Women were the first, the most expendable, the most pliant, and the easiest victims.
 - You feel the grit in the clay, the slick surface of the glass, the pliant rubber.
 
   1soft and moving easily in the way that you want:   Isabel was pliant in his arms.  her pliant lips2easily influenced and controlled by other people:   Pliant judges have been a problem in the past.—pliantly adverb—pliancy noun [uncountable]  |