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quantifiable

/kwon-tuh-fahy-uh-buhl/US // ˌkwɒn təˈfaɪ ə bəl //

可量化的,可量化,可计量的,可定量的

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : able to be measured or counted:The goal for your walking program should be quantifiable, like 45 minutes per day, or a particular number of miles.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The California Coastal Commission, which studies and oversees seawalls and other coastal development, has explicitly stated that seawalls do not provide any quantifiable public safety benefit.

  • What WNBA front offices will be looking for, then, is a legitimate, quantifiable leap or further development of a skill already flashed, while they cast a net wider than the top prospects for 2021 and think in multi-year terms.

  • Well, despite the seemingly open-ended nature of this question, I’ve conducted extensive research, and I’m pleased to report that it does, in fact, have a quantifiable answer.

  • Recently, however, there have been signs that the Institute is taking a more strategic and quantifiable approach.

  • Our research for the report has drawn our attention to the total lack of quantifiable data on the impacts of climate change on heritage in sub-Saharan Africa.

  • But seriously, the fame of Breaking Bad—that has been a quantifiable change.

  • The press has very few data points to point to: money, polling, and a quantifiable ground game.

  • To manage a crisis, seasoned handlers attempt to assess quantifiable marketplace damage, or precisely what must be preserved.