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provable

[ UK /pɹˈuːvəbə‍l/ ]
[ US /ˈpɹuvəbəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. 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 provable In A Sentence

  • Materialistic solutions in the science of man, humanitarian ends in legislation, naturalism in art, active faith in the improvableness of institutions ” all these are once more the marks of speculation and the guiding ideas of practical energy. Diderot and the Encyclopaedists
  • A more interesting occurrence of a term of the form MM can be seen in the provable inequation Combinatory Logic
  • Yet notwithstanding, the persons of believers being accepted through Christ, their good works also are accepted in him, [1504] not as though they were in this life wholly unblamable and unreprovable in The Creeds of the Evangelical Protestant Churches.
  • First, a correspondence between formulas that are provable in the implicational fragment of intuitionistic logic and the typable combinatory terms was discovered. Combinatory Logic
  • Even more sure than something "provable" as gravity. Kirk Cameron attempts to debunk Darwin
  • Prov (Sb (ru1 ¦ unZ (x1) ¦ Z (xn))), by: ˜the formula with Gödel number r is provable if the Gödel number for the xi th numeral is substituted in place of the i th variable,™ neither the formal statement within the theory P nor anything we prove about it appeals to such meanings. Kurt Gödel
  • I must say that arguments about best steak are a bit like arguments about best Abba songs - unprovable and uninteresting.
  • We can and should debate, as best we can, where the lines should be drawn, but we should recognize that at some point it comes down to the unproven and unprovable, for the secular among us as well as for the religious.
  • The US and its allies need to focus on the strengths of their case rather than draw attention to flights of fancy or unprovable (for now) points.
  • Materialistic solutions in the science of man, humanitarian ends in legislation, naturalism in art, active faith in the improvableness of institutions -- all these are once more the marks of speculation and the guiding ideas of practical energy. Diderot and the Encyclopædists (Vol 1 of 2)
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