| 释义 | 
		Definition of determinable in English: determinableadjective dɪˈtəːmɪnəb(ə)ldəˈtərmənəb(ə)l 1Able to be definitely decided or ascertained.  a readily determinable market value  Example sentencesExamples -  But even more fundamentally, he believed that nature exists independent of the experimenter, and the motions of particles are precisely determinable.
 -  In the case of triads, RyRs are already identifiable, and their coordinates and orientations should be determinable with high reliability and precision.
 -  Displacements are for the most part not determinable, although some faults displace dykes by distances of up to 20 m.
 -  The same schools also debated whether concepts such as justice are determinable objectively by reason or exclusively by revelation.
 -  Upon discovering it was empty the group moved on, passing portraits and tapestries far too grimy to be determinable.
 -  Sufficient original contacts between lithologies can be locally observed such that the original stratigraphie succession is determinable with reasonable confidence.
 -  Investments in marketable securities with readily determinable fair values and all investments in debt securities are valued at their fair values in the statement of financial position.
 -  In summary, we found that several easily determinable clinical characteristics are independently associated with bacteremia in patients admitted to the hospital with pneumonia.
 -  Measures of test accuracy are often thought of as fixed characteristics determinable by research and then applicable in practice.
 -  For the investments that have a readily determinable market price, the auditor can check the market value by using various market listings that show the last bid price of stocks and bonds and government obligations.
 -  If the costs are to be capitalized, then the next issue is to determine the asset's determinable useful life, if any.
 -  Only the latter has any objectively determinable market value.
 -  If, to give an unlikely scenario, there had been no take-over and the shares had been delisted but continued to trade in the over-the-counter market, the conversion right would still have a value determinable in the market place.
 -  But even if I referred to a table for example, whether I were talking about a figure in a book or an item of furniture would only be determinable from the context and not solely from my use of the word itself.
 -  Although, it was hard to tell, on a day when social status appeared to be determinable purely by the size of your sunglasses.
 -  In emphasizing the objectively determinable market value, Bueckner ignores the value of the dogs as companions and as beloved pets.
 -  Each of two parties owes the other determinable amounts.
 -  Monies were due by a determinable date without demand.
 -  After all, the answers to large-scale questions are in many cases not determinable by the evidence we have before us.
 -  The difference between anxiety and fear is that we fear a particular and determinable being, whereas anxiety lacks a determinable object.
 
  Synonyms ascertainable, known, definite, clear-cut, precise, exact, specific 2Law  Capable of being brought to an end under given conditions.  Example sentencesExamples -  In Mattheus v Doego a contract's continuation was determinable by the entry of Spain, Portugal and Greece to the Community.
 -  It may be no more than a licence determinable at any time, or a tenancy at will.
 -  The statutory meaning of notice to quit covers a notice exercising a break clause and clearly contemplates that a fixed term tenancy determinable by such a notice is still a ‘term of years certain’.
 -  In any case where a residential contract is determinable by notice given by either party to the other, a notice so given shall be of no effect unless it is given not less than 4 weeks before the date on which it is to take effect.
 
 
 Origin   Late Middle English: via Old French from late Latin determinabilis 'finite', from the verb determinare (see determine).    Definition of determinable in US English: determinableadjectivedəˈtərmənəb(ə)ldəˈtərmənəb(ə)l 1Able to be firmly decided or definitely ascertained.  a readily determinable market value  Example sentencesExamples -  In the case of triads, RyRs are already identifiable, and their coordinates and orientations should be determinable with high reliability and precision.
 -  In summary, we found that several easily determinable clinical characteristics are independently associated with bacteremia in patients admitted to the hospital with pneumonia.
 -  Investments in marketable securities with readily determinable fair values and all investments in debt securities are valued at their fair values in the statement of financial position.
 -  But even more fundamentally, he believed that nature exists independent of the experimenter, and the motions of particles are precisely determinable.
 -  Upon discovering it was empty the group moved on, passing portraits and tapestries far too grimy to be determinable.
 -  For the investments that have a readily determinable market price, the auditor can check the market value by using various market listings that show the last bid price of stocks and bonds and government obligations.
 -  After all, the answers to large-scale questions are in many cases not determinable by the evidence we have before us.
 -  Monies were due by a determinable date without demand.
 -  But even if I referred to a table for example, whether I were talking about a figure in a book or an item of furniture would only be determinable from the context and not solely from my use of the word itself.
 -  The same schools also debated whether concepts such as justice are determinable objectively by reason or exclusively by revelation.
 -  In emphasizing the objectively determinable market value, Bueckner ignores the value of the dogs as companions and as beloved pets.
 -  Each of two parties owes the other determinable amounts.
 -  Only the latter has any objectively determinable market value.
 -  Measures of test accuracy are often thought of as fixed characteristics determinable by research and then applicable in practice.
 -  Displacements are for the most part not determinable, although some faults displace dykes by distances of up to 20 m.
 -  Sufficient original contacts between lithologies can be locally observed such that the original stratigraphie succession is determinable with reasonable confidence.
 -  The difference between anxiety and fear is that we fear a particular and determinable being, whereas anxiety lacks a determinable object.
 -  If the costs are to be capitalized, then the next issue is to determine the asset's determinable useful life, if any.
 -  If, to give an unlikely scenario, there had been no take-over and the shares had been delisted but continued to trade in the over-the-counter market, the conversion right would still have a value determinable in the market place.
 -  Although, it was hard to tell, on a day when social status appeared to be determinable purely by the size of your sunglasses.
 
  Synonyms ascertainable, known, definite, clear-cut, precise, exact, specific 2Law  Capable of being brought to an end under given conditions; terminable.  Example sentencesExamples -  It may be no more than a licence determinable at any time, or a tenancy at will.
 -  The statutory meaning of notice to quit covers a notice exercising a break clause and clearly contemplates that a fixed term tenancy determinable by such a notice is still a ‘term of years certain’.
 -  In any case where a residential contract is determinable by notice given by either party to the other, a notice so given shall be of no effect unless it is given not less than 4 weeks before the date on which it is to take effect.
 -  In Mattheus v Doego a contract's continuation was determinable by the entry of Spain, Portugal and Greece to the Community.
 
 
 Origin   Late Middle English: via Old French from late Latin determinabilis ‘finite’, from the verb determinare (see determine).     |