inferable
61consequent — I. a. 1. Following, consequential, resulting. 2. Deducible, inferable or inferrible. II. n. 1. Following or succeeding event, second or after term. 2. Deduction, conclusion, inference …
62mixture — mixture, admixture, blend, compound, composite, amalgam denote a product formed by the combination of two or more things. Mixture is the most inclusive and most widely applicable term; it has, however, many specific applications; thus, a fabric… …
63tendency — tendency, trend, drift, tenor can mean a movement or course having a particular direction and character or the direction and character which such a movement or course takes. Tendency usually implies an inherent or acquired inclination in a person …
64deducible — adj inferable, derivable, traceable; consequent, sequent; conceivable, logical, reasonable …
65demonstrable — adj provable, evincible, attestable, confirmable, substantiable, establishable, verifiable; inferable, deductable, self evident, axiomatic; conclusive, decisive, positive, certain, undeniable, unquestionable, indubitable, indisputable,… …
66derivable — adj traceable, ascribable, attributable, imputable, assignable; accountable, referable, explicable; deducible, inferable, educible, concludable; obtainable, evolvable, elicitable, extractable …
67legitimate — adj 1. legal, licit, lawful, Sl. legit; within the law, by law, de jure, legally sound; statutory, legislated, enfranchised; constitutional, decreed, ordained, prescribed, mandated; licensed, chartered, empowered, indefeasible. 2. proper, right,… …
68infer — [c]/ɪnˈfɜ / (say in fer) verb (inferred, inferring) –verb (t) 1. to derive by reasoning; conclude or judge from premises or evidence. 2. (of facts, circumstances, statements, etc.) to indicate or involve as a conclusion; imply. 3. to imply or… …
69legitimate — adjective /ləˈdʒɪtəmət / (say luh jituhmuht) 1. according to law; lawful. 2. in accordance with established rules, principles, or standards. 3. of the normal or regular type or kind. 4. in accordance with the laws of reasoning; logically… …
70-able — able, ible 1. general. These two suffixes are derived from Latin endings abilis and ibilis, either directly or through Old French. Of the two, able is an active suffix that can be freely added to the stems of transitive verbs, whereas the set of… …