separable
IPA: sˈɛpɝʌbʌɫ
adjective
- Able to be separated.
- (differential equations) Able to be brought to a form where all occurrences of the dependent and the independent variable are on opposite sides of the equal sign.
- (mathematical analysis, of a topological space) Having a countable dense subset.
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Examples of "separable" in Sentences
- The candy is separable into two.
- This notion of an immaterial soul potentially separable from the body clashes starkly with the scientific view.
- It's most likely because a large-scale event like an earthquake can't easily be separable from a small one like a landslide - the latter often triggered by the former.
- Also, defend your view that what “the result should be according to law” is actually separable from the conservative or liberal tendencies of the person writing the opinion?
- As I pointed out in my review, I was addressing only reverse engineering the device itself (and generic data on it), not addressing any trade secret data, separable from the device, remaining onit.
- As he convincingly illustrates, what Blake objected to was the Cartesian construct of nature as an object domain separable from human consciousness, a world of dead matter that could be exploited ad infinitum to benefit humanity's estate.
- Aristotle adds, however, that Socrates had stopped at the point here indicated: he had not gone on, like some others, to make those universal notions or definitions "separable" -- separable, that is to say, from the particular and concrete instances, from which he had gathered them.
- The present multivariate twin study of 3 executive functions (inhibiting dominant responses, updating working memory representations, and shifting between task sets), measured as latent variables, examined why people vary in these executive control abilities and why these abilities are correlated but separable from a behavioral genetic perspective.
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