Get Free Checker

eradicable

[ US /ɪˈɹædəkəbəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. able to be eradicated or rooted out

How To Use eradicable In A Sentence

  • With concerted action with the tools available today, it is potentially eradicable, says ANURADHA KHATI RAJIVAN.
  • The slave trade had an ineradicable effect on world history.
  • Conservatives such as Lorenz von Stein and liberals such as the British utilitarian political economists consider them an in - eradicable feature of modern societies. CLASS
  • ineradicable superstitions
  • Pacs, one of the first such programs in the nation, was founded on the premise that war and other forms of violence are neither inevitable nor ineradicable, despite their omnipresence in human history.
  • She stopped, bit her lip: twenty-odd years ago was only yesterday, grief was there in the blood like an ineradicable cancer. MURDER SONG
  • Or could it possibly have deep and ineradicable roots in the tradition itself? Sister Joan Chittister, OSB: In Search Of The Divine Feminine
  • In the ineradicable central image lies, I suspect, much of the meaning of Fosse's cryptically haunting play: the co-existence in all of us of the craving for death and the instinct for life. I Am the Wind | Michael Billington
  • The idea of a primordial, ineradicable Guilt is not original to Heidegger.
  • For him, faith was ineradicable as long as humans were in fear of personal annihilation - a contingency that seems likely to persist.
View all