frangible
ADJ ที่ แตก ได้ ที่ หัก ได้ breakable fragile frail sturdy ti-teak-dai
FRANGIBLE
a.[from L. frango, to break. ] That may be broken; brittle; fragile; easily broken.
Fran "gi *ble, a. Etym: [Cf. F. frangible. ]
fran gi ble |ˈfranjəbəl ˈfrænʤəbəl | ▶adjective formal fragile; brittle. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French, or from medieval Latin frangibilis, from Latin frangere ‘to break. ’
frangible |ˈfran (d )ʒɪb (ə )l | ▶adjective able to be broken into fragments; brittle or fragile: the frangible skull of an infant | figurative : she had kept his frangible mind together through many troubled years. • denoting ammunition designed to disintegrate into very small particles on impact: frangible bullets. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French, or from medieval Latin frangibilis, from Latin frangere ‘to break ’.