Find the word definition

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Inferable

Inferable \In*fer"a*ble\ ([i^]n*f[~e]r"[.a]*b'l or [i^]n*f[e^]r"-; 277), a. Capable of being inferred or deduced from premises. [Written also inferrible.]
--H. Spencer.

A sufficient argument . . . is inferable from these premises.
--Burke.

Wiktionary
inferable

a. That can be implied or inferred.

Usage examples of "inferable".

We know when we have a toothache, what we are thinking of, what dreams we have when we are asleep, and a host of other occurrences which we only know about others when they tell us of them, or otherwise make them inferable by their behaviour.

Taken as a problem in logic, the answer is, of course, that absolutely nothing in the way of abstract mental content is inferable from the mere fact that we can use intelligently words of which the meaning is abstract.

All that is inferable from language is that two instances of a universal, even when they differ very greatly, may cause the utterance of two instances of the same word which only differ very slightly.

If it were taken seriously, its advocates ought to profess that any one truth is logically inferable from any other, and that, for example, the fact that Caesar conquered Gaul, if adequately considered, would enable us to discover what the weather will be to-morrow.

The fit at the sides was exact, but between the top of the crumpled fragment and the inferable from Sydney half an inch was missing, sufficient space to have held announcement of six or seven boats' arrival.

The actual creation itself was a blank in my memories, and those rare wonderful moments when I was creating as I wrote, fast as I could set it down, were gone, inferable only by their absence.

From the nature of what he was now doing it was inferable that the place was not so populous as its register may have shown it to be.