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[ UK /sˈɛpəɹəbə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. capable of being divided or dissociated
    the siamese twins were not considered separable
    often drugs and crime are not dissociable
    a song...never conceived of as severable from the melody

How To Use separable In A Sentence

  • Europe was last united in neolithic times, before the inseparable meshwork of land, people, community and trade separated into hierarchy, nations and cities.
  • Kij: Nice to see Dream-Quest receive such prominence with that fantastic Gervasio Gallardo cover, inseparable from the contents thanks to childhood associations very similar to yours. MIND MELD: Books That Hold Special Places in Our Hearts and On Our Shelves
  • A separable reinforced concrete numerical model and fluid-solid interconnection method were used to predict the development of surface bulge in LS-DYNA.
  • In fact, the history of the Church demonstrates that praxis is not only inseparable from, but actually flows out of didache or teaching. Archive 2008-07-13
  • In fact, social status throughout Polynesia had two quite distinct and separable aspects to it.
  • The fragrance evoked an aroma of fruits and flowers so ripe, they are starting to decay, reminding us of Thanatos, which is forever inseparable from Eros. Archive 2007-07-01
  • But in reality they are not separable from other aspects of the mind.
  • But he has spent decades implanting the idea that he is an icon of his people and the two are inseparable.
  • This realism remains inseparable from humanism, from a persistently innocent representation.
  • He has come out of his own story; and this is perhaps the best definition that can be offered of a great literary character: that he becomes a separable being.
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