Crossword clues for deducible
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Deducible \De*du"ci*ble\, a.
-
Capable of being deduced or inferred; derivable by reasoning, as a result or consequence.
All properties of a triangle depend on, and are deducible from, the complex idea of three lines including a space.
--Locke. -
Capable of being brought down. [Obs.]
As if God [were] deducible to human imbecility.
--State Trials (1649).
Wiktionary
a. capable of being deduced
WordNet
adj. capable of being deduced
Usage examples of "deducible".
All the other talents of a critic will not require a particular mention, being included, or easily deducible to these.
However, a few of their most important precepts, deducible from it, are by no means to be omitted.
I shall venture to affirm, that whatever difference may be found in their several conjectures, they will be all, without the least distortion, manifestly deducible from the text.
It was therefore deducible that he must have left (a) by way of a rope to the roof, or (b) by means of climbing up inside the chimney to the roof.
Shaw has, for the sake of wit or novelty, taken up any position which was not directly deducible from the body of his doctrine as elsewhere expressed.
The new statement was undecidable, not deducible from the set within him.
The attendance at church was, of course, set down to “business considerations,” and was held to be quite consistent with the scepticism and loose morality deducible from the French book and the unground coffee.
Move, move, MOVE became his mantra, movement with no deducible purpose, movement for movement's sake, westward, westward, on the trail of the long-lost sun and the still visible but receding moon.
Wherein I pretend not to advance any Position of my own, but only to shew what are the Consequences that seem to me deducible from the Principles of Christian Politiques, (which are the holy Scriptures,) in confirmation of the Power of Civill Soveraigns, and the Duty of their Subjects.