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conceivability

/kuhn-see-vuh-buhl/US // kənˈsi və bəl //UK // (kənˈsiːvəbəl) //

可想而知,可设想性,可想象性,可想性

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : capable of being conceived; imaginable.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • It’s conceivable, but barely so, that the molecules will collect in the corner of the little box and then be in an even more special state.

  • It’s conceivable to me that the next multi-million or even billion-dollar global sporting franchise could be in esports.

  • The business model for private equity firms like Leonard Green involves stripping cash out of the organization, loading down operations with debt and reducing every conceivable expense.

  • Still, “it’s conceivable that you could be surprised,” says Greg Adkins.

  • It’s been a long slog to get to the point where doing error correction is even conceivable.

  • It is conceivable, if highly unlikely, that most Palestinians will try to pull back from the brink.

  • This is, in every conceivable way, a recipe for catastrophe.

  • Is it not at least conceivable that the American electorate has changed the way it views women candidates?

  • There is no conceivable justification for treating people born on Tuesday differently than other people in terms of driving.

  • The strongest conceivable U.S. land or amphibious forces would not provide a military option.

  • Loss, where she was concerned, involved a permanent and irremediable bereavement—no substitute was conceivable.

  • The plagued nation effected a revolution over its snuff-boxes in the happiest conceivable manner.

  • It is conceivable that the art of agriculture may have been one of the outcomes of the situation in which man now found himself.

  • Above, in the lower lofts, every conceivable human oddity was assembled in a sort of mercantile crazy quilt.

  • They are such illogical fools; a logical fool in an office, with a lot of red tape, is conceivable.