Voltage-gated ion channels underlie rapid electric signaling in excitable cells.
From the nature.com
Nobody besides a few excitable Democrats believes John McCain will lose Arizona.
From the economist.com
Miata is as quiet as a lamb, while Fabregas is pretty robust and very excitable.
From the themercury.com.au
Black is the excitable sort, often yelling and pounding the table on press row.
From the kansas.com
The excitable 55-year-old leader saw that Greece's woes could rock the euro zone.
From the online.wsj.com
It is yet another epiphany for the excitable Treslove, and one for Jacobson also.
From the telegraph.co.uk
The country's thicket of excitable cable-news networks reports on nothing else.
From the economist.com
You want more exciting play-calling, maybe you start with a more excitable coach.
From the sacbee.com
This can make you more excitable than usual but it can also attract good fortune.
From the suntimes.com
More examples
Easily excited
Capable of responding to stimuli
(excitability) excessive sensitivity of an organ or body part
(excitability) The state of being excitable; A measure of how easy something is to excite
(Excitability) The ability to generate action potentials.
(excitability) the disposition of a tissue or living cell to respond to a stimulus or change in the environment.
The potential of a structure to produce waves. Even if no waves are present, the potential to produce them makes the structure excitable. A liquid surface with wind blowing over it is excitable, it is capable of producing waves. The surface structures of eukaryotic cells are also excitable.