predictable
IPA: prɪdˈɪktʌbʌɫ
noun
- (uncommon) A predictable thing.
adjective
- Able to be predicted.
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Examples of "predictable" in Sentences
- The larger the number, the more predictable is the future.
- It ought to be un-American for education quality to remain predictable by zip code.
- Less predictable is his ultimate position, which could be first or second base or center or left field.
- The results are simple morality tales, correcting injustice and resetting order in predictable, comforting ways.
- Ditching the association you have with eating out as fun and different and bringing your lunch as boring and predictable is important.
- Last night's Levy talks ended in predictable failure but only after negotiations had continued to within half an hour of the midnight deadline.
- There is complete doubt, and your continuing efforts to spread debunked lies and disinformation is predictable from a fascist brownshirt retard.
- The gap between spending and revenues was entirely predictable from the outset, and the democrats are to blame for those, not the the recession.
- I don't know what definition of "predictable" they've encountered, but in the one I know, "predictable" is what you were expecting and, when you don't get it, that's "unpredictable".
- My HMO wants me to have a physical every year -- what you call a predictable expense -- because it increases the odds that it will catch an illness early when it is much less expensive to treat.
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