Definition of Educible

1. a. Capable of being educed.

Definition of Educible

1. Adjective. Able to be elicited or evoked ¹

2. Adjective. Able to be deduced ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Educible

1. educe [adj] - See also: educe

Lexicographical Neighbors of Educible

educationeses
educationist
educationists
educationless
educations
educative
educatively
educator
educators
educatory
educatress
educatresses
educe
educed
educes
educible (current term)
educing
educrat
educrats
educt
eduction
eductions
eductive
eductor
eductors
educts
edulcorant
edulcorate
edulcorated
edulcorates

Literary usage of Educible

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Elements of Logic as a Science of Propositions by Emily Elizabeth Constance Jones (1890)
"... Categorical form ; that Conditionals and Categoricals, of which S and P in the one correspond to A and C in the other, are reciprocally educible ; that ..."

2. An Introduction to General Logic by Emily Elizabeth Constance Jones (1892)
"... and P in the one correspond to A and C in the other) are reciprocally educible ... educible from the Categorical which answers to the PAGE Inferential, ..."

3. The Sanitarian by Medico-Legal Society of New York (1889)
"... the obligation to acquire it—instruction in the principles— out of which other knowledge is educible ; hence educate-—to draw out and apply knowledge. ..."

4. Expository notes, with practical observations, towards the opening of the by Benjamin Needler (1655)
"... whichis educible into a<5t by vertue of a ... which is educible into a&,by vertu'6' ..."

5. The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowper: Including the Series by Alexander Chalmers, Samuel Johnson (1810)
"... music, ur any of ¡he elegant arts, might lie i/educible from one or other of those principles ..."

6. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1900)
"... however, as rare as comparison is commonplace and is far fainter and less educible or contagious. Advocates of the elimination of pity usually cite and ..."

7. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann, Edward Aloysius Pace, Condé Bénoist Pallen, Thomas Joseph Shahan, John Joseph Wynne (1913)
"In the one case of forms not so educible, the efficient Consistent with this teaching is that in which the angels are said to be distinguished specifically, ..."

Other Resources:

Search for Educible on Dictionary.com!Search for Educible on Thesaurus.com!Search for Educible on Google!Search for Educible on Wikipedia!

Search