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Definition of Exchangeable
1. Adjective. Suitable to be exchanged.
Antonyms: Unexchangeable
2. Adjective. Capable of being exchanged for or replaced by something of equal value. "Convertible securities"
Attributes: Convertibility
Similar to: Cashable, Redeemable
Derivative terms: Convert, Convertibility, Exchangeability
Antonyms: Inconvertible
3. Adjective. Capable of replacing or changing places with something else; permitting mutual substitution without loss of function or suitability. "Interchangeable parts"
Similar to: Replaceable
Derivative terms: Interchangeability, Interchangeableness, Similarity
Definition of Exchangeable
1. a. Capable of being exchanged; fit or proper to be exchanged.
Definition of Exchangeable
1. Adjective. Able to be exchanged. ¹
2. Adjective. (finance) Having an associated right to be exchanged for another form of financial security. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Exchangeable
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Exchangeable
Literary usage of Exchangeable
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Principles of Political Economy Applied to the Condition, the Resources by Francis Bowen (1859)
"Is this amount of exchangeable value destroyed, and is the introduction of ...
The answer is, in this case as in the former one, that the exchangeable value ..."
2. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1830)
"ON THE SUPPLY AND Exchangeable VALUE OF THE PRECIOUS METALS. WRITERS on currency
seem, iu general, to assume that the rise which has been gradually taking ..."
3. Topics in Statistical Dependence by Henry W. Block, Allan R. Sampson, Thomas H. Savits (1990)
"SOME MAJORIZATION INEQUALITIES FOR FUNCTIONS OF Exchangeable RANDOM VARIABLES BY
PHILIP J. ... Majorization inequalities, exchangeable random variables, ..."
4. Principles of political economy considered with a view to their practical by Thomas Robert Malthus (1836)
"Of the Distribution occasioned by Commerce, internal and external, considered as
the Means of increasing the exchangeable Value of Produce. ..."
5. The Elements of Political Economy by Francis Wayland (1851)
"Cost; that is, labor bestowed, is the foundation of exchangeable value, and from
ihis, ... The greater the supply, the less the exchangeable value. 3. ..."