(UN-1 12.)
1854. C. Black, in Lond. Lancet (1857), I. 314. That the fluid portion of the disease should have been six times dispersed by the aid of medicines is a fact worthy of special notice in the treatment of such cases, as offering a striking exception to the general rule of their unamenability to the influence of medicinal agents.
1865. Cornh. Mag., May, 591. One set of features characteristic of pestilence is the suddenness of its onset; its unamenability to the resources of the healing art.
1924. M. Samuel, You Gentiles, vi. 110. All our [Jews] organizations are small, but never too small to be unwieldy because of dissension and, worse than dissension, because of unamenability to regular discipline.