inferable
11inferable — …
12inferrible — 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. [1913 Webster] A sufficient argument . . . is inferable from these premises.… …
13infer — inferable, inferible, inferrible, adj. inferably, adv. inferrer, n. /in ferr /, v., inferred, inferring. v.t. 1. to derive by reasoning; conclude or judge from premises or evidence: They inferred his displeasure from his cool tone of voice. 2.… …
14inferential — Inferable or deducible from facts which have been proved …
15Pro-drop language — Linguistic typology Morphological Isolating Synthetic Polysynthetic Fusional Agglutinative Morphosyntactic Alig …
16Rule of inference — In logic, a rule of inference (also called a transformation rule) is a function from sets of formulae to formulae. The argument is called the premise set (or simply premises ) and the value the conclusion . They can also be viewed as relations… …
17textual criticism — n. the scholarly study of the text of a written work, often, specif., in an effort to determine the original or most authoritative form of that work * * * Introduction the technique of restoring texts as nearly as possible to their original …
18in|fer|ri|ble — «ihn FUR uh buhl», adjective. = inferable. (Cf. ↑inferable) …
19Inducible — In*du ci*ble, a. 1. Capable of being induced, caused, or made to take place. [1913 Webster] 2. Obtainable by induction; derivable; inferable. [1913 Webster] …
20Inferrible — In*fer ri*ble, a. Inferable. [1913 Webster] …