Definitionadj. (usually followed by `to') able to be traced to
Last update: September 26, 2015
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It is not traceable in history before A.D. [Please select]
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But it is in the sixth book only in which anything more than a verbal similarity is traceable. [Please select]
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It is a disposition traceable in a vast proportion of the British literature of the time. [Please select]
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The travels of the "Fables of Bidpai" from India to Europe are well known and distinctly traceable. [Please select]
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All the same, Angela greeted her cordially enough, with only a faint conscientious stiffness traceable to her mother. [Please select]
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"Then they ought to be traceable, even among the huge herds the Masai have." [Please select]
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Almost every disaster, every fault of its management was traceable more or less directly to Davis. [Please select]
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His appearance suggested that some explanation of David might be traceable in this quarter. [Please select]
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Some diseases, such as Texas fever and nagana, are traceable to protozoa, while others, like actinomycosis and aspergillosis, are caused by fungi. [Please select]
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There still remains on the ground a fair amount of broken stone, suitable for building, but no lines of wall are now traceable. [Please select]
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She was one of six sisters, of whom one is not traceable; four gave rise to mixed criminal and pauper lines, and Margaret to a distinctively criminal line. [Please select]
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