[
US
/dɪˈɫɪvɝəbəɫ, dɪˈɫɪvɹəbəɫ/
]
[ UK /dɪlˈɪvəɹəbəl/ ]
[ UK /dɪlˈɪvəɹəbəl/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- suitable for or ready for delivery
NOUN
-
something that can be provided as the product of development
under this contract the deliverables include both software and hardware
How To Use deliverable In A Sentence
- Sometimes the audience is just the person creating it (to help with analysis or just as an aide memoire) but there is usually a wider group of people who are interested in any significant deliverable.
- They propose a builddown with elimination of many existing weapons, allowing both sides to replace obsolete launchers, both sides to reach a total of five thousand deliverable warheads, that number to remain stable for five years after the three-year reduction period. Red Storm Rising
- What we need is obvious, graspable and deliverable.
- The government branded their plans to develop the site as 'undeliverable'. Times, Sunday Times
- And because the asset has been used before, the developer can demonstrate greater expertise through reference work products and past deliverables and proven engagement models.
- But he warned with any action 'we have to be more realistic in what is deliverable'. The Sun
- Factor-in government policies and ambitions and sustaining the tax base looks virtually undeliverable. Times, Sunday Times
- Suppose the seller puts a letter in the post informing the buyer that the goods are in a deliverable state.
- Offering teams should propose a payable event schedule for disbursement of these funds based on their integrated set of milestones, accomplishment criteria and deliverables.
- A bizarre thought and quite undeliverable in a time of austerity. Times, Sunday Times