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词汇 separable
释义

Definition of separable in English:

separable

adjective ˈsɛp(ə)rəb(ə)lˈsɛp(ə)rəb(ə)l
  • 1Able to be separated or treated separately.

    可分的;可分离的

    body and soul are not separable

    身体和灵魂是不可分的。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This approach may work well enough on domestic issues where the goodies - tax credits, Social Security checks, new schools, lower insurance premiums - are concrete and separable.
    • I argue that Christianity and conservatism are indeed thoroughly separable.
    • My views on her actual politics should be easily separable from my views on her worth as an engaged citizen, just as my feelings about the righteousness of her current gaol term should be separable from my views about her political fate.
    • The production of academic knowledge in American universities was never separable from the overall social, political, and economic requirements of the American state.
    • Property rights are not separable from an action.
    • Or do they perhaps have agendas that are as complex, diverse and separable from their sexuality as women, gun owners or Christians, for that matter?
    • However, in practice, the roles of Commissioners on the one hand and of the services on the other are not as separable or as distinguishable as these provisions of the Code imply.
    • Legality and enforcement are to some substantial degree separable - here more than in the criminal law, I would suggest.
    • We are fond of separating style and content but they aren't separable: they come from the same place.
    • The institutions and mechanisms of governance of African states are often no longer separable from the international mechanisms of governance with which they are engaged.
    • But this doesn't look like the world of presidential elections, where there are many separable policy dimensions: economic liberty, personal liberty, foreign policy, and so on.
    • These two areas of contention were distinct from each other, but not really separable.
    • Technical limits relate to the extent to which services are separable from the core activities of the firm in question.
    • The parts are of course separable and debatable.
    • He has come out of his own story; and this is perhaps the best definition that can be offered of a great literary character: that he becomes a separable being.
    • But there is another factor and that's why I think it's quite important to be able to look at Maori mental health as a distinctive problem that is separable from socio-economic disadvantage.
    • With older forms of communication, generic information, such as addresses on envelopes or telephone numbers, is separable from content, such as letters and telephone conversations.
    • If attitudes and behavior are not clearly separable, they do not satisfy the criterion of independence between causes and effects that is a fundamental, assumption of scientific explanation.
    • But in reality they are not separable from other aspects of the mind.
    • In fact, social status throughout Polynesia had two quite distinct and separable aspects to it.
    Synonyms
    divisible, distinguishable, distinct, independent
    detachable, removable, severable
    technical scissile
  • 2Grammar
    (of a verb) having a prefix that is written as a separate word in some circumstances.

    1. 2.1 (of an English phrasal verb) allowing the insertion of the direct object between the base verb and the particle, e.g. look it over as opposed to go over it.
      〔语法〕(英语短语动词)可被宾语分开的

Derivatives

  • separability

  • noun sɛp(ə)rəˈbɪlɪtiˌsɛp(ə)rəˈbɪlədi
    • The separability of the two questions of whether a law is good and whether it is constitutional is itself a crucial point.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • For he appends to his denial of the soul's separability the observation that some parts of the soul may in the end be separable after all, since they are not the actualities of any part of the body.
      • To draw such a distinction, these theologians say, is to assume the separability of religion and morality, but that assumption is itself a highly controversial viewpoint.
      • This distinction between merely possible and essential modes provides an argument for the separability of pure mind from things of the body.
      • I am aware of the issue in terms of the non-separability, or the difficulty of separability, of the cardboard from the plastic, which also does not carry the required identification.
  • separableness

  • nounˈsɛp(ə)rəblnəsˈsɛp(ə)rəbəlnəs
    • The fact that he always laughs over the book, shows what a fraud his professed belief in the separableness of mind and body actually is.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The separableness of the adipose matter from the gland itself is well illustrated by the facts of both cases.
  • separably

  • adverbˈsɛp(ə)rəbliˈsɛp(ə)rəbli
    • The group of wipes includes at least three wipes separably joined together, each separable wipe joined to each adjacent wipe by a weakened line.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The sealing channels of the lids of the lid member are adapted to mate with the brims of the cups to provide a plurality of separably joined sealed containers when the lid member and cup member are joined in sealing engagement.
      • It is suggested that in the future financial reporting requirements for business entities include a statement of ‘separably exchangeable property’ and legal obligations at the reporting date.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin separabilis, from separare 'disjoin, divide' (see separate).

Definition of separable in US English:

separable

adjectiveˈsep(ə)rəb(ə)lˈsɛp(ə)rəb(ə)l
  • 1Able to be separated or treated separately.

    可分的;可分离的

    body and soul are not separable

    身体和灵魂是不可分的。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • These two areas of contention were distinct from each other, but not really separable.
    • Property rights are not separable from an action.
    • If attitudes and behavior are not clearly separable, they do not satisfy the criterion of independence between causes and effects that is a fundamental, assumption of scientific explanation.
    • Or do they perhaps have agendas that are as complex, diverse and separable from their sexuality as women, gun owners or Christians, for that matter?
    • In fact, social status throughout Polynesia had two quite distinct and separable aspects to it.
    • Legality and enforcement are to some substantial degree separable - here more than in the criminal law, I would suggest.
    • But there is another factor and that's why I think it's quite important to be able to look at Maori mental health as a distinctive problem that is separable from socio-economic disadvantage.
    • He has come out of his own story; and this is perhaps the best definition that can be offered of a great literary character: that he becomes a separable being.
    • The institutions and mechanisms of governance of African states are often no longer separable from the international mechanisms of governance with which they are engaged.
    • But this doesn't look like the world of presidential elections, where there are many separable policy dimensions: economic liberty, personal liberty, foreign policy, and so on.
    • I argue that Christianity and conservatism are indeed thoroughly separable.
    • The production of academic knowledge in American universities was never separable from the overall social, political, and economic requirements of the American state.
    • Technical limits relate to the extent to which services are separable from the core activities of the firm in question.
    • But in reality they are not separable from other aspects of the mind.
    • However, in practice, the roles of Commissioners on the one hand and of the services on the other are not as separable or as distinguishable as these provisions of the Code imply.
    • With older forms of communication, generic information, such as addresses on envelopes or telephone numbers, is separable from content, such as letters and telephone conversations.
    • The parts are of course separable and debatable.
    • My views on her actual politics should be easily separable from my views on her worth as an engaged citizen, just as my feelings about the righteousness of her current gaol term should be separable from my views about her political fate.
    • We are fond of separating style and content but they aren't separable: they come from the same place.
    • This approach may work well enough on domestic issues where the goodies - tax credits, Social Security checks, new schools, lower insurance premiums - are concrete and separable.
    Synonyms
    divisible, distinguishable, distinct, independent
    1. 1.1Grammar (of a German prefix) separated from the base verb when inflected.
      〔语法〕(德语动词前缀)分离的
    2. 1.2Grammar (of a German verb) consisting of a prefix and a base verb that are separated when inflected, e.g., einführen.
      〔语法〕(德语动词)分离的
    3. 1.3Grammar (of an English phrasal verb) allowing the insertion of the direct object between the base verb and the particle, e.g., look it over as opposed to go over it.
      〔语法〕(英语短语动词)可被宾语分开的

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin separabilis, from separare ‘disjoin, divide’ (see separate).

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