deducible 的定义
de·duced, de·duc·ing.
- to derive as a conclusion from something known or assumed; infer: From the evidence the detective deduced that the gardener had done it.
- to trace the derivation of; trace the course of: to deduce one's lineage.
deducible 近义词
understandable
更多deducible例句
- She figured it out by deducing that the woman with the camera must be with The Washington Post, and the man next to her, Matt Gontarchick, was her date.
- The researchers deduced that two of the passengers on the flight must have acquired the virus with this particular genetic sequence in North America, then boarded a plane where they likely transmitted the virus to two flight attendants.
- Having worked on the early stages of the Manhattan Project, Webb eventually deduced that the radiation came from Cerium-141, the byproduct of a nuclear fusion explosion.
- Because the hole was the only thing inside space, the authors deduced that its entanglement entropy was rising.
- Because dinosaur eggs evolved independently, what researchers have deduced about parental care may represent just one lineage, Wiemann says.
- Not only is it not deducible, but it is not even 165thinkable.
- The eclipse happened at the time deducible from the tables constructed according to Newton's law, says he again.
- Erroneous—that which does not directly contradict the faith, but some conclusion evidently deducible from the faith.
- We would by no means charge Dr. Youmans with all the consequences naturally deducible from such a statement.
- Here, then, could not exist that commingling of sects, which were deducible in all their varied extravagance from the Bible.