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Definition of Propagable
1. a. Capable of being propagated, or of being continued or multiplied by natural generation or production.
Definition of Propagable
1. Adjective. Capable of being propagated. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Propagable
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Propagable
Literary usage of Propagable
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Boyer's French Dictionary: Comprising All the Additions and Improvements of by Abel Boyer, William Bentley Fowle (1835)
"propagable, adj. qui peut être multiplié. PROPAGATE, va Sí n. étendre, répandre.
PROPAGATION, s. propagation, f. généra- PROPAGATOR, s. propagateur, m. ..."
2. Neoplastic Diseases: A Treatise on Tumors by James Ewing (1922)
"... resistance in partly immunized animals, a conclusion from which Murray dissents.
Considering the variation observed in propagable tumors in comparison ..."
3. The Dublin Quarterly Journal of Medical Science: Consisting of Original (1867)
"It is often urged that cholera is not propagable by contagion, because cases
occur under circumstances where it is impossible to trace their origin to this ..."
4. Systematic Theology: A Compendium and Commonplace-book Designed for the Use by Augustus Hopkins Strong (1907)
"E. That if Adam's sin and condemnation can be ours by propagation, the righteousness
and faith of the believer should be propagable also. ..."
5. The study of medicine by John Mason Good, Samuel Cooper (1829)
"That, like other exanthems, it consists in and is propagable by a epidemic tnat
... within the human body, or whether it be only propagable by a stream of ..."
6. Outlines of Systematic Theology: Designed for the Use of Theological Students by Augustus Hopkins Strong (1908)
"E. That if Adam's sin and condemnation can be ours by propagation, the righteousness
and faith of the believer should be propagable also. ..."
7. The Beginnings of Life: Being Some Account of the Nature, Modes of Origin by Henry Charlton Bastian (1872)
"And even if the diseases are now only propagable by contagion—just as the ...
propagable by reproduction—they must nevertheless have originated once; and, ..."