[
UK
/pəsˈiːvəbəl/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
capable of being perceived especially by sight or hearing
perceivable through the mist - capable of being apprehended or understood
How To Use perceivable In A Sentence
- There is no real perceivable process behind his Bosch-like creations, so just like his audience, he too waits to see how his work will unfold.
- There is no place for them in the future, since there is no "perceivable" future for most of them anyway. Las Vegas Sun Stories: All Sun Headlines
- I say, imperceivable for the present, and considered each of them singly and by themselves; but sufficiently perceivable, after that some considerable space of time, and a frequent iteration of them, has wrought such a change in the soul, as to a spiritual discernment will quickly shew and discover itself. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. IV.
- It translates these purported interactions into a mode perceivable and tangible to man.
- perceivable through the mist
- Science is that branch of knowledge which deals with the material world, the world and natural phenomena that are observable, measurable and perceivable by the senses.
- The monarch butterfly can discern tastes 12,0000 times more subtle than those perceivable by human taste buds.
- They exalted the existence of what is visible, and took no thought for what is perceivable to the mind and yet invisible. In the Valley of the Shadow
- There will not be any perceivable effect on the animal during communication awake or asleep.
- Having proved that the inequality, which may subsist between man and man in a state of nature, is almost imperceivable, and that it has very little influence, I must now proceed to show its origin, and trace its progress, in the successive developments of the human mind. First Part