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Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
replicable

1520s, "that may be replied to," from Latin stem of reply + -able. Meaning "that may be duplicated" is from 1953, from replicate (v.). Related: Replicability.

Wiktionary
replicable

a. That can be replicated.

Usage examples of "replicable".

Susan Pockett has enumerated all sorts of research that says that the brain’s electromagnetic field does change in replicable ways when experiencing specific qualia: you can measure changes in the brain’s electromagnetic field when you’re looking at something red as opposed to blue, or hearing a middle C instead of a high C, and so on.

The researchers could hardly believe their result, but within a few days they had pushed up to 93 K, and had a repeatable, replicable procedure.

As I’m sure you’re aware, however, certain political and economic interests have taken the position that our inability to measure their actual sentience with ‘demonstrable, replicable precision’ means their sapience is no more than a legal fiction.

As I'm sure you're aware, however, certain political and economic interests have taken the position that our inability to measure their actual sentience with `demonstrable, replicable precision' means their sapience is no more than a legal fiction.