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Answer for the clue "Like some machine parts ", 15 letters:
interchangeable

Alternative clues for the word interchangeable

Word definitions for interchangeable in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. Freely substitutable. May be swapped at will.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
adj. of or relating to or suggestive of complementation; "interchangeable electric outlets" [syn: complementary , reciprocal ] (mathematics, logic) such that the arguments or roles can be interchanged; "the arguments of the symmetric relation, `is a sister ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
late 14c. (implied in interchangeably ), from inter- + changeable . Related: Interchangeability .

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ The camera has two interchangeable lenses. ▪ The terms "sociopath" and "psychopath" are interchangeable .

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Interchangeable \In`ter*change"a*ble\, a. [Cf. OF. entrechangeable.] Admitting of exchange or mutual substitution. ``Interchangeable warrants.'' --Bacon. Following each other in alternate succession; as, the four interchangeable seasons. --Holder. ...

Usage examples of interchangeable.

So, that evening I sat next to Cris and Angela Bellhanger and listened to the opera which informs us that our personalities are irrelevant, and indeed interchangeable, that one lover is really quite as good as another, that all women do it and it all comes to the same thing in the end.

TFN to rebuild itself after Operation Pesthouse, and to provide the entire Grand Alliance with expendable munitions which were fully interchangeable between any of its member navies.

She wanted to be mistaken, to have misplaced, miscounted the essentially interchangeable stock, but knew at once that no amount of wishful thinking, checking, rechecking the shelves, could erase the stubborn fact of loss gaping up at her from the mockingly vacant slots of the gem trays.

Governor and commander are interchangeable terms with Phil, expressive of the same respect and deference and applicable to nobody but Mr. George.

But none of them, not Kevin, not his three interchangeable sidemen, had ever seen or heard of a girl with black curly hair who called SLEEP OF THE INNOCENT 75 herself Jennifer Wilson.

Sex wasn't the first thing that came to her mind when she thought of Gerald (in a word-association test, security would probably have popped out first), but that day the two things had been all but interchangeable.

The artist is fond of a certain forget-me-not blue for the shading and we think he's a pouf but the diagrammatic vital statistics are up to scratch and there's a clever system using key colours for giving what amounts to a visual permutation table for the types of ammo interchangeable among the run-of-the-mill international models, but they haven't yet conceded the obvious point that we need a set of oblique head-on pictures at something like ten or twelve degrees from the line of sight and a specially big one from above.

By this time the names of Sugar House gangsters and Purple gangsters seemed to become interchangeable in the local press.

One Labor Day weekend they had motored to Southampton, where for three days in an old house belonging to her Uncle Ogden Watress, Clay drank gin and tonic (not bourbon and water), played tennis on a grass court (not clay) and lunched daily at a beach club overlooking an oval pool in which the noise of interchangeable towheaded children drowned out all talk of the stock market (not politics).

The parties of the second part and of the third part were interchangeable.

The modern First Division player is for the most part an anonymous young man: he and his colleagues have interchangeable physiques, similar skills, similar pace, similar temperaments.

There are those who think violence and sadism interchangeable terms, and those who regard detective fiction as subliterary on no better grounds than that it does not habitually get itself jammed up with subordinate clauses, tricky punctuation and hypothetical subjunctives.