[
US
/ˈdɛmənstɹəbəɫ/
]
[ UK /dˈɛmənstɹəbəl/ ]
[ UK /dˈɛmənstɹəbəl/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
necessarily or demonstrably true
demonstrable truths -
capable of being demonstrated or proved
a demonstrable lack of concern for the general welfare
practical truth provable to all men
obvious lies
How To Use demonstrable In A Sentence
- There is, in our submission, no demonstrable or justiciable error of law that should attract this Court's jurisdiction arising from the judgment of the Full Court.
- But there is no demonstrable shortage of low skilled workers in the United States today.
- ‘The dissimilitude between the terms ‘civil marriage’ and ‘civil union’ is not innocuous: it is a considered choice of language that reflects a demonstrable assigning of same-sex, largely homosexual couples to second-class status.
- I am not sure what demonstrable benefit they have. Times, Sunday Times
- IT _may be expected by some faithless Persons, that I should produce an_ HERMAPHRODITE _to publick View, as an incontestible Justification of there being Humane Creatures of this kind; but as I have no Authority to take up the Petticoats of any Female without her Consent, I hope to be excus'd from making such demonstrable Proofs; and if I had such a Power, the Sight might endanger the Welfare of some pregnant Female, whose Tractus de Hermaphrodites Or, A Treatise of Hermaphrodites
- Oh yeah - because consumerism and advertising has no demonstrable negative effects.
- The only grounds I have [to refuse permission for the trials] is if there is demonstrable scientific evidence to offset the decision.
- Yet no one, he concludes, has offered demonstrable proof that Paul made conscious use of schooled rhetorical training.
- The report contains numerous demonstrable errors.
- The quantitative character of the interaction between opposed inhibition and excitation is experimentally demonstrable. Sir Charles Sherrington - Nobel Lecture