ascertainable
English
editEtymology
editPronunciation
edit- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˌæsəˈteɪnəbl̩/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˌæsɚˈteɪnəbl̩/
Adjective
editascertainable (comparative more ascertainable, superlative most ascertainable)
- Able to be ascertained.
- 1990, Harold N. Skelton, “Houses on the Sand: Takings Issues Surrounding Statutory Restrictions on the Use of Oceanfront Property”, in Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review, volume 18, number 1, page 144:
- For example, when regulation prevents a developer from building rental property, the value of existing or reasonably ascertainable leases represents an opportunity cost of the prohibition to the developer.
- 1991 March 23, Russell Baker, “Facing the Music”, in The New York Times[1], page 23:
- The easily ascertainable fact, they point out, is that what they feel is not anger toward parents speaking Lennon's name, but only contempt for the few so ignorant of cultural history that they think it was John Lennon, instead of Paul McCartney, who sang "Why Don't We Do It in the Road?"
- 1991, Robert Conquest, “A Letter to a Soviet Historian”, in Academic Questions, volume 4, number 4, , page 38:
- The real responsibility, the reasons behind the assassination, were still in dispute half a century later. But even events that are less crucial are still often incompletely ascertainable.
Derived terms
editTranslations
editable to be ascertained
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