developable


de·vel·op

D0177600 (dĭ-vĕl′əp)v. de·vel·oped, de·vel·op·ing, de·vel·ops v.tr.1. To bring from latency to or toward fulfillment: an instructor who develops the capabilities of each student.2. a. To expand or enlarge: developed a national corporation into a worldwide business.b. To aid in the growth of; strengthen: exercises that develop muscles.c. To improve the quality of; refine: develops his recipes to perfection; an extra year of study to develop virtuosic technique.3. a. To cause to become more complex or intricate; add detail and fullness to; elaborate: began with a good premise but developed it without imagination.b. Music To elaborate (a theme) with rhythmic and harmonic variations.4. a. To bring into being gradually: develop a new cottage industry.b. To set forth or clarify by degrees: developed her thesis in a series of articles.5. a. To come to have gradually; acquire: develop a taste for opera; develop a friendship.b. To become affected with; contract: developed a rash; developed agoraphobia.6. To cause gradually to acquire a specific role, function, or form, as:a. To influence the behavior of toward a specific end: an investigator who develops witnesses through flattery and intimidation.b. To cause (a tract of land or a building) to serve a particular purpose: developed the site as a community of condominiums.c. To make available and effective to fulfill a particular end or need: develop the state's water resources to serve a growing population.d. To convert or transform: developed the play into a movie.7. Games To move (a chess piece) to or toward a more strategic position.8. a. To process (a photosensitive medium such as exposed film) in order to produce a photographic image.b. To produce (a photographic image) by use of a photosensitive medium or by printing from a digital file.v.intr.1. a. To grow by degrees into a more advanced or mature state: With hard work, she developed into a great writer.b. To increase or expand: Sales developed until we needed a bigger warehouse.c. To improve; advance: Their skill developed until it rivaled their teacher's.2. To come gradually into existence or activity: Tension developed between students and faculty.3. To come gradually to light; be disclosed: reports the news as it develops.4. Biology a. To progress from earlier to later stages of a life cycle: Caterpillars develop into butterflies.b. To progress from earlier to later stages of evolution: Mammals developed during the Mesozoic Era.c. To acquire secondary sex characteristics. Used especially of a girl.
[French développer, from Old French desveloper : des-, dis- + voloper, to wrap (possibly of Celtic origin).]
de·vel′op·a·ble adj.