Definition of Statable

1. a. That can be stated; as, a statablegrievance; the question at issue is statable.

Definition of Statable

1. Adjective. Capable of being stated. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Statable

1. capable of being stated [adj]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Statable

stashes
stashie
stashies
stashing
stashy
stasima
stasimon
stasis
stat
stat dec
stat mi
statable (current term)
statal
statant
statant(ip)
statarianly
statary
statcoulomb
state
state's attorney
state's evidence
state-controlled
state-of-the-art
state-sponsored terrorism
state-supported
state attorney

Literary usage of Statable

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

1. Editorials and Editorial-writing by Robert Wilson Neal (1921)
"Dependence upon a proposition, stated or statable.—Being argumentative in ultimate purpose, the controversial editorial must conform to the basic principles ..."

2. Matter and Spirit: A Study of Mind and Body in Their Relation to the by James Bissett Pratt (1922)
"Materialism is a perfectly statable hypothesis. The question still remains, Is it true? Is it or is the opposing hypothesis true? ..."

3. Matter and Spirit: A Study of Mind and Body in Their Relation to the by James Bissett Pratt (1922)
"Materialism is a perfectly statable hypothesis. The question still remains, Is it true? Is it or is the opposing hypothesis true? ..."

4. The Arena by Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) (1906)
"and discovered that difference to be statable in terms of material wealth. ... When we say that the differences in enjoyment may be statable in terms of ..."

5. War and the Ideal of Peace: A Study of Those Characteristics of Man that by Henry Rutgers Marshall (1915)
"... may be shown to be statable in terms of physical and chemical reactions; which in their turn are statable in terms of purely mechanical principles. ..."

6. War and the Ideal of Peace: A Study of Those Characteristics of Man that by Henry Rutgers Marshall (1915)
"... may be shown to be statable in terms of physical and chemical reactions; which in their turn are statable in terms of purely mechanical principles. ..."

7. A Modern Symposium: Subjects: the Soul and Future Life by Frederic Harrison (1878)
"... for some single fact about it, statable in terms of the rest of our knowledge; the reply is—mystery, absence of everything so statable or cognizable, ..."

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