Definition of Dissociable

1. Adjective. Capable of being divided or dissociated. "A song...never conceived of as severable from the melody"

Exact synonyms: Separable, Severable
Similar to: Divisible
Derivative terms: Separability

Definition of Dissociable

1. a. Not well associated or assorted; incongruous.

Definition of Dissociable

1. Adjective. Able to be dissociated, divided or separated ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Dissociable

1. [adj]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Dissociable

dissipates
dissipating
dissipation
dissipation function
dissipation functions
dissipational
dissipationless
dissipations
dissipative
dissipatively
dissipativities
dissipativity
disslander
dissociabilities
dissociability
dissociable (current term)
dissocial
dissocialize
dissocialized
dissocializes
dissocializing
dissociate
dissociated
dissociated anaesthesia
dissociated nystagmus
dissociates
dissociating
dissociation
dissociation by interference
dissociation constant

Literary usage of Dissociable

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Physical Chemistry of the Proteins by Thorburn Brailsford Robertson (1918)
"Compounds of the Proteins with Inorganic Bases and Acids; the Non-dissociable Character of the Inorganic Radical. —We have already had occasion to ..."

2. A Textbook of pharmacology and therapeutics, or, the Action of drugs in by Arthur Robertson Cushny (1918)
"The dissociable iron salts precipitate proteins from solution and thus act ... The less dissociable compounds, such as the double salts and "organic" iron ..."

3. Proceedings by Bristol Naturalists' Society (1888)
"(3) We next investigated the question regarding the vapour-pressures, or, to use the ordinary term, pressures of dissociation, of dissociable bodies. ..."

4. The Journal of Experimental Medicine by Rockefeller University, Rockefeller Institute, Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research (1899)
"... this would indicate that the large albumin molecules were being broken down into smaller, but as yet non-dissociable, molecules, possibly into peptones. ..."

5. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1892)
"The same thing holds for uranyl salts, the sulphate being less dissociable than the nitrate, and this again than the chloride. ..."

6. Essentials of physiology by Francis Arthur Bainbridge, James Acworth Menzies (1916)
"dissociable oxygen of the oxyhaemoglobin molecule, and the solution becomes brown, its spectrum showing a characteristic band in the red in addition to ..."

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