-
commutable
0
adj 1: subject to alteration or change; "the death sentence was
commutable to life imprisonment" [ant: incommutable]
2: capable of being exchanged for another or for something else
that is equivalent [syn: commutable, substitutable]
-
computable
0
adj 1: may be computed or estimated; "a calculable risk";
"computable odds"; "estimable assets" [syn: computable,
estimable]
-
conceal
0
v 1: prevent from being seen or discovered; "Muslim women hide
their faces"; "hide the money" [syn: hide, conceal]
[ant: show]
2: hold back; keep from being perceived by others; "She conceals
her anger well" [syn: conceal, hold back, hold in]
-
congeal
0
v 1: become gelatinous; "the liquid jelled after we added the
enzyme" [syn: jell, set, congeal]
-
corneal
0
adj 1: of or related to the cornea
-
creel
0
n 1: a wicker basket used by anglers to hold fish
-
disputable
0
adj 1: capable of being disproved [syn: debatable,
disputable]
2: open to argument or debate; "that is a moot question" [syn:
arguable, debatable, disputable, moot]
-
eel
0
n 1: the fatty flesh of eel; an elongate fish found in fresh
water in Europe and America; large eels are usually smoked
or pickled
2: voracious snakelike marine or freshwater fishes with smooth
slimy usually scaleless skin and having a continuous vertical
fin but no ventral fins
-
excitable
0
adj 1: easily excited [ant: unexcitable]
2: capable of responding to stimuli [syn: excitable,
irritable]
-
exportable
0
adj 1: suitable for export; "exportable cultural achievements"
[ant: unexportable]
-
genteel
0
adj 1: marked by refinement in taste and manners; "cultivated
speech"; "cultured Bostonians"; "cultured tastes"; "a
genteel old lady"; "polite society" [syn: civilized,
civilised, cultivated, cultured, genteel,
polite]
-
ideal
0
adj 1: conforming to an ultimate standard of perfection or
excellence; embodying an ideal
2: constituting or existing only in the form of an idea or
mental image or conception; "a poem or essay may be typical
of its period in idea or ideal content"
3: of or relating to the philosophical doctrine of the reality
of ideas [syn: ideal, idealistic]
n 1: the idea of something that is perfect; something that one
hopes to attain
2: model of excellence or perfection of a kind; one having no
equal [syn: ideal, paragon, nonpareil, saint,
apotheosis, nonesuch, nonsuch]
-
ignitable
0
adj 1: capable of burning [syn: burnable, ignitable,
ignitible]
-
immutable
0
adj 1: not subject or susceptible to change or variation in form
or quality or nature; "the view of that time was that all
species were immutable, created by God" [syn:
immutable, changeless] [ant: changeable, mutable]
-
imputable
0
adj 1: capable of being assigned or credited to; "punctuation
errors ascribable to careless proofreading"; "the
cancellation of the concert was due to the rain"; "the
oversight was not imputable to him" [syn: ascribable,
due, imputable, referable]
-
indictable
0
adj 1: liable to be accused, or cause for such liability; "the
suspect was chargeable"; "an indictable offense" [syn:
chargeable, indictable]
-
indisputable
0
adj 1: not open to question; obviously true; "undeniable guilt";
"indisputable evidence of a witness" [syn:
incontestable, indisputable, undisputable]
2: impossible to doubt or dispute; "indisputable (or sure)
proof" [syn: indisputable, sure]
-
inscrutable
0
adj 1: of an obscure nature; "the new insurance policy is
written without cryptic or mysterious terms"; "a deep
dark secret"; "the inscrutable workings of Providence";
"in its mysterious past it encompasses all the dim
origins of life"- Rachel Carson; "rituals totally
mystifying to visitors from other lands" [syn: cryptic,
cryptical, deep, inscrutable, mysterious,
mystifying]
-
insupportable
0
adj 1: incapable of being justified or explained [syn:
indefensible, insupportable, unjustifiable,
unwarrantable, unwarranted]
-
mutable
0
adj 1: capable of or tending to change in form or quality or
nature; "a mutable substance"; "the mutable ways of
fortune"; "mutable weather patterns"; "a mutable foreign
policy" [syn: mutable, changeable] [ant:
changeless, immutable]
-
ordeal
0
n 1: a severe or trying experience
2: a primitive method of determining a person's guilt or
innocence by subjecting the accused person to dangerous or
painful tests believed to be under divine control; escape was
usually taken as a sign of innocence [syn: ordeal, trial
by ordeal]
-
portable
0
adj 1: easily or conveniently transported; "a portable
television set" [ant: unportable]
2: of a motor designed to be attached to the outside of a boat's
hull; "a portable outboard motor"
n 1: a small light typewriter; usually with a case in which it
can be carried
-
puerile
0
adj 1: of or characteristic of a child; "puerile breathing"
2: displaying or suggesting a lack of maturity; "adolescent
insecurity"; "jejune responses to our problems"; "their
behavior was juvenile"; "puerile jokes" [syn: adolescent,
jejune, juvenile, puerile]
-
refutable
0
adj 1: able to be refuted [syn: questionable, refutable,
confutable, confutative]
-
repeal
0
n 1: the act of abrogating; an official or legal cancellation
[syn: abrogation, repeal, annulment]
v 1: cancel officially; "He revoked the ban on smoking"; "lift
an embargo"; "vacate a death sentence" [syn: revoke,
annul, lift, countermand, reverse, repeal,
overturn, rescind, vacate]
-
reportable
0
adj 1: (of income) required by law to be reported; "reportable
income" [ant: unreportable]
2: meriting report; "years of research produced no reportable
results"
-
reveal
0
v 1: make visible; "Summer brings out bright clothes"; "He
brings out the best in her" [syn: uncover, bring out,
unveil, reveal]
2: make known to the public information that was previously
known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a
secret; "The auction house would not disclose the price at
which the van Gogh had sold"; "The actress won't reveal how
old she is"; "bring out the truth"; "he broke the news to
her"; "unwrap the evidence in the murder case" [syn:
unwrap, disclose, let on, bring out, reveal,
discover, expose, divulge, break, give away, let
out]
3: disclose directly or through prophets; "God rarely reveal his
plans for Mankind"
-
spiel
0
n 1: plausible glib talk (especially useful to a salesperson)
[syn: spiel, patter, line of gab]
v 1: replay (as a melody); "Play it again, Sam"; "She played the
third movement very beautifully" [syn: play, spiel]
2: speak at great length (about something)
-
squeal
0
n 1: a high-pitched howl
v 1: utter a high-pitched cry, characteristic of pigs [syn:
squeal, oink]
2: confess to a punishable or reprehensible deed, usually under
pressure [syn: confess, squeal, fink]
-
steal
0
n 1: an advantageous purchase; "she got a bargain at the
auction"; "the stock was a real buy at that price" [syn:
bargain, buy, steal]
2: a stolen base; an instance in which a base runner advances
safely during the delivery of a pitch (without the help of a
hit or walk or passed ball or wild pitch)
v 1: take without the owner's consent; "Someone stole my wallet
on the train"; "This author stole entire paragraphs from my
dissertation"
2: move stealthily; "The ship slipped away in the darkness"
[syn: steal, slip]
3: steal a base
-
steel
0
n 1: an alloy of iron with small amounts of carbon; widely used
in construction; mechanical properties can be varied over a
wide range
2: a cutting or thrusting weapon that has a long metal blade and
a hilt with a hand guard [syn: sword, blade, brand,
steel]
3: knife sharpener consisting of a ridged steel rod
v 1: get ready for something difficult or unpleasant [syn:
steel, nerve]
2: cover, plate, or edge with steel
-
substitutable
0
adj 1: (of words) interchangeable in a given context without
changing the import of the expression
2: capable of being exchanged for another or for something else
that is equivalent [syn: commutable, substitutable]
-
suitable
0
adj 1: meant or adapted for an occasion or use; "a tractor
suitable (or fit) for heavy duty"; "not an appropriate
(or fit) time for flippancy" [syn: suitable, suited]
2: worthy of being chosen especially as a spouse; "the parents
found the girl suitable for their son" [syn: desirable,
suitable, worthy]
-
supportable
0
adj 1: capable of being borne though unpleasant; "sufferable
punishment" [syn: bearable, endurable, sufferable,
supportable]
-
surreal
0
adj 1: characterized by fantastic imagery and incongruous
juxtapositions; "a great concourse of phantasmagoric
shadows"--J.C.Powys; "the incongruous imagery in surreal
art and literature" [syn: phantasmagoric,
phantasmagorical, surreal, surrealistic]
2: resembling a dream; "night invested the lake with a dreamlike
quality"; "as irrational and surreal as a dream" [syn:
dreamlike, surreal]
-
transmutable
0
adj 1: capable of being changed in substance as if by alchemy;
"is lead really transmutable into gold?"; "ideas
translatable into reality" [syn: convertible,
transformable, translatable, transmutable]
-
transportable
0
adj 1: capable of being moved or conveyed from one place to
another [syn: movable, moveable, transferable,
transferrable, transportable]
-
unreal
0
adj 1: lacking in reality or substance or genuineness; not
corresponding to acknowledged facts or criteria; "ghosts
and other unreal entities"; "unreal propaganda serving as
news" [ant: existent, real]
2: not actually such; being or seeming fanciful or imaginary;
"this conversation is getting more and more unreal"; "the
fantastically unreal world of government bureaucracy"; "the
unreal world of advertising art" [ant: real(a)]
3: contrived by art rather than nature; "artificial flowers";
"artificial flavoring"; "an artificial diamond"; "artificial
fibers"; "artificial sweeteners" [syn: artificial,
unreal] [ant: natural]
4: lacking material form or substance; unreal; "as insubstantial
as a dream"; "an insubstantial mirage on the horizon" [syn:
insubstantial, unsubstantial, unreal] [ant: material,
real, substantial]
-
unseal
0
v 1: break the seal of; "He unsealed the letter" [ant: seal]
-
unsuitable
0
adj 1: not meant or adapted for a particular purpose; "a solvent
unsuitable for use on wood surfaces"
2: not capable of being applied; "rules inapplicable to day
students" [syn: inapplicable, unsuitable]
3: not conducive to good moral development; "the movie is
unsuitable for children"
4: not worthy of being chosen (especially as a spouse) [syn:
undesirable, unsuitable]
-
unsupportable
0
adj 1: not able to be supported or defended
-
weil
0
n 1: French philosopher (1909-1943) [syn: Weil, Simone Weil]
2: United States mathematician (born in France) (1906-1998)
[syn: Weil, Andre Weil]
-
brasil
0
n 1: the largest Latin American country and the largest
Portuguese speaking country in the world; located in the
central and northeastern part of South America; world's
leading coffee exporter [syn: Brazil, Federative
Republic of Brazil, Brasil]
-
steele
0
n 1: English writer (1672-1729) [syn: Steele, Sir Richrd
Steele]
-
emile
0
n 1: the boy whose upbringing was described by Jean-Jacques
Rousseau
-
reseal
0
v 1: seal again; "reseal the bottle after using the medicine"
-
unexcitable
0
adj 1: not easily excited; "an unexcitable temperament" [ant:
excitable]
-
deportable
0
-
exploitable
0
-
extraditable
0
-
prosecutable
0
-
beal
0
-
beale
0
-
beall
0
-
beel
0
-
beil
0
-
camille
0
-
jarriel
0
-
lucille
0
-
impartible
0
-
scrutable
0
-
statutable
0
-
unwritable
0
-
unstatutable
0