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Synonyms for deducible


Grammar : Adj
Spell : dih-doos, -dyoos
Phonetic Transcription : dɪˈdus, -ˈdyus

Top 10 synonyms for deducible Other synonyms for the word deducible

Définition of deducible

Origin :
  • early 15c., from Latin deducere "lead down, derive" (in Medieval Latin, "infer logically"), from de- "down" (see de-) + ducere "to lead" (see duke (n.)). Originally literal; sense of "draw a conclusion from something already known" is first recorded 1520s, from Medieval Latin. Related: Deduced; deducing.
  • adj understandable
Example sentences :
  • Evidence to the same effect is deducible from a Japanese custom.
  • Extract from : « The Ceramic Art » by Jennie J. Young
  • One further evidence, and that not the least important, is deducible from geology.
  • Extract from : « Illustrations of Universal Progress » by Herbert Spencer
  • This is deducible from a more general law, known as the conservation of energy.
  • Extract from : « The Telephone » by A. E. Dolbear
  • But this with its historically not deducible power is the decisive thing.
  • Extract from : « History of Dogma, Volume 1 (of 7) » by Adolph Harnack
  • Not only is it not deducible, but it is not even 165thinkable.
  • Extract from : « Is Life Worth Living? » by William Hurrell Mallock
  • What he denied was, motion as a fact belonging to the Absolute, or as deducible from the Absolute.
  • Extract from : « Plato and the Other Companions of Sokrates, 3rd ed. Volume I (of 4) » by George Grote
  • Many very important conclusions are deducible from the facts recorded in these valuable tables.
  • Extract from : « The Stock-Feeder's Manual » by Charles Alexander Cameron
  • Nor is there any a posteriori reason for supposing any such inference to be deducible from a study of the phenomena themselves.
  • Extract from : « Human Personality and its Survival of Bodily Death » by Frederick W. H. Myers
  • This interpretation is not only deducible in a very obvious manner from the fable itself, but is likewise agreeable to experience.
  • Extract from : « Critical Remarks on Sir Charles Grandison, Clarissa, and Pamela (1754) » by Anonymous
  • True it is that all these consequences were deducible from it as matter of argument, and flowed from it in fact.
  • Extract from : « William the Third » by H. D. Traill

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