Definition of Expressible

1. Adjective. Capable of being expressed. "An expressible emotion"


Definition of Expressible

1. a. Capable of being expressed, squeezed out, shown, represented, or uttered.

Definition of Expressible

1. Adjective. Able to be expressed. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Expressible

1. [adj]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Expressible

expressage
expressages
expresse
expressed
expressed almond oil
expressed emotion
expressed gene
expressed mustard oil
expressed skull fracture
expresser
expressers
expresses
expressest
expresseth
expressibility
expressible (current term)
expressibly
expressing
expression
expression-linked copy
expression cloning
expression library
expression of interest
expression site
expression system
expression vector
expressional
expressionism
expressionisms
expressionist

Literary usage of Expressible

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

1. The Harmony of the World by Johannes Kepler, A. M. (Alistair Matheson) Duncan, Eric J. Aiton, Judith Veronica Field (1997)
"See Euclid X, 71, 108, So no kind of combination can be called in here: we are left only with the lines of lower standing, having excluded the expressible ..."

2. An Introduction to the Theory of Multiply Periodic Functions by Henry Frederick Baker (1907)
"And in particular, a single-valued meromorphic function of U19..., Un which is periodic with a system -3J0 in terms of which the system -ST is expressible ..."

3. Theory of Maxima and Minima by Harris Hancock (1917)
"... necessary and sufficient condition that a homogeneous quadratic function <f>(xl9 #2, • • •, x^^^A^x^x^ le expressible as a function of n — 1 variables. ..."

4. Abel's Theorem and the Allied Theory: Including the Theory of the Theta by Henry Frederick Baker (1897)
"Hence, every rational function of order less than p +1, is expressible as the quotient of two adjoint polynomials of grade (n — 1) er + и, — 3. Ex. i. ..."

5. Rational Religion, and the Rationalistic Objections of the Bampton Lectures by Goldwin Smith (1861)
"relation expressible by the human terms ' truth' and ' falsehood' ? But supposing it to be ascertained that they are only in part false ; how are we to know ..."

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