denotable
Look at other dictionaries:
Denotable — De*not a*ble, a. [From {Denote}.] Capable of being denoted or marked. Sir T. Browne. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
denotable — de·not·able … English syllables
denotable — də̇ˈnōd.əbəl, dēˈ , ōtə adjective Etymology: denote + able : capable of being denoted … Useful english dictionary
denote — denotable, adj. denotement, n. /di noht /, v.t., denoted, denoting. 1. to be a mark or sign of; indicate: A fever often denotes an infection. 2. to be a name or designation for; mean. 3. to represent by a symbol; stand as a symbol for. [1585 95;… … Universalium
Indication — (Roget s Thesaurus) < N PARAG:Indication >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 indication indication Sgm: N 1 symbolism symbolism symbolization Sgm: N 1 semiology semiology semiotics semeiology semeiotics Sgm: N 1 Zeitgeist Zeitgeist … English dictionary for students
Countable set — Countable redirects here. For the linguistic concept, see Count noun. Not to be confused with (recursively) enumerable sets. In mathematics, a countable set is a set with the same cardinality (number of elements) as some subset of the set of… … Wikipedia
denote — /dəˈnoʊt / (say duh noht) verb (t) (denoted, denoting) 1. to be a mark or sign of; indicate: a quick pulse often denotes fever. 2. to be a name or designation for. 3. to represent by a symbol; stand as a symbol for. {French dénoter, from Latin… …
scalar — a. like a ladder; denotable by a number. ♦ scalariform, a. like a ladder … Dictionary of difficult words
denote — [dē nōt′, dinōt′] vt. denoted, denoting [Fr dénoter < MFr < L denotare, to mark out, denote < de , down + notare, to mark < nota, NOTE] 1. to be a sign of; indicate [dark clouds denote rain] 2. to signify or refer to explicitly; stand … English World dictionary