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Synonyms

adaptive

American  
[uh-dap-tiv] / əˈdæp tɪv /

adjective

  1. serving or able to adapt; showing or contributing to adaptation.

    the adaptive coloring of a chameleon.


Other Word Forms

  • adaptively adverb
  • adaptiveness noun
  • adaptivity noun
  • nonadaptive adjective
  • readaptive adjective
  • readaptively adverb
  • readaptiveness noun
  • unadaptive adjective
  • unadaptively adverb
  • unadaptiveness noun

Etymology

Origin of adaptive

First recorded in 1815–25; adapt + -ive

Compare meaning

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Explanation

Use adaptive to describe people who are flexible — they don't lose their cool when plans change quickly and they are always willing to learn new ways to do things. Being adaptive helps you sail along in today's ever-changing world. What do chameleons and your grandparents who only started using computers a few years ago have in common? They are adaptive. Just as chameleons change color to match their surroundings — green when sitting on leaves, brown when climbing the tree's trunk — your grandparents learned the skills to keep up with the world around them. The opposite of adaptive is stubborn. People, lizards, or anything that refuses to change are stubborn. To welcome change is to be adaptive.

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing adaptive

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

This could lead to technologies such as frictional metamaterials, adaptive damping systems, and contactless control components.

From Science Daily • Mar. 22, 2026

In patients who already produce normal or elevated levels of endogenous GLP-1, flooding those same receptors with long-acting agonists may push a finely tuned system past its adaptive range.

From Slate • Mar. 22, 2026

Humans are surprisingly resilient and adaptive, and our desire to be creative and to be in groups won’t go away.

From The Wall Street Journal • Feb. 26, 2026

We believe that current AI technology allows organizations with malicious intent to deploy large numbers of autonomous, adaptive, coordinated agents to multiple social media platforms.

From Salon • Feb. 15, 2026

It can be argued that youthful derring- do is in fact evolutionarily adaptive, a behavior encoded in our genes.

From "Into the Wild" by Jon Krakauer