It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 10th.
Today's word is tractable, spelled T-R-A-C-T-A-B-L-E.
Tractable is an adjective.
It's used to describe someone or something that is easily led, managed, taught, or controlled.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Forbes by William Robertson.
Kawasaki's popular KLR650 only makes about 40 horsepower,
yet it has launched untold numbers of epic rides due to its reliable,
tractable, and manageable output.
A frequentative is a form of a verb that indicates repeated action.
The frequentative of the word sniff, for example, is sniffle, meaning to sniff repeatedly.
Some English words come from a frequentative in another language, and tractable is one.
Tractable, meaning easily led or managed, comes from the Latin adjective tractabilis,
which in turn comes from the verb tractare,
which has various meanings, including to drag about, to handle, to deal with, and to treat.
Not to drag on too much about Latin,
but tractare is the frequentative of another Latin verb, trahere, meaning to drag or pull.
Now, one can pull or tug a draft animal on a lead,
for example, whether or not that animal is willing or compliant.
But if one can pull, handle,
or otherwise deal with that animal repeatedly or continuously with ease,