Deducible: meaning, definitions and examples

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deducible

 

[ dɪˈdjuːsəb(ə)l ]

Adjective
Context #1 | Adjective

logic

Able to be logically inferred or deduced.

Synonyms

inferable, logical, predictable

Examples of usage

  • The conclusion was deducible from the evidence presented.
  • The solution to the problem was deducible through careful analysis.
Context #2 | Adjective

law

Capable of being derived or concluded from known facts or evidence.

Synonyms

ascertainable, concludable, derivable

Examples of usage

  • The judge found the defendant's guilt to be deducible from the DNA evidence.
  • The deduction was deducible from the contract terms.

Translations

Translations of the word "deducible" in other languages:

🇵🇹 dedutível

🇮🇳 निष्कर्षणीय (nishkarsheeṇīya)

🇩🇪 ableitbar

🇮🇩 dapat disimpulkan

🇺🇦 виведений

🇵🇱 dający się wywnioskować

🇯🇵 導き出せる (michibikidaseru)

🇫🇷 déductible

🇪🇸 deducible

🇹🇷 çıkarılabilir

🇰🇷 추론할 수 있는 (churonal su inneun)

🇸🇦 قابل للاستخلاص (qābil lil'istikhlāṣ)

🇨🇿 odvoditelný

🇸🇰 odvoditeľný

🇨🇳 可推导的 (kě tuīdǎo de)

🇸🇮 določljiv

🇮🇸 ályktaður

🇰🇿 шығарылатын

🇬🇪 გამოსაყვანი (gamosaqvani)

🇦🇿 çıxarıla bilən

🇲🇽 deducible

Word origin

The word 'deducible' comes from the Latin word 'deducere', which means 'to lead down' or 'to infer'. The term has been used in logic and law to signify the ability to infer or derive conclusions from existing evidence or premises. The concept of deducibility has been fundamental in reasoning and argumentation, allowing for logical deductions and conclusions to be drawn based on known facts or premises.

See also: deduce, deduct.

Word Frequency Rank

At rank #26,517, this word represents specialized academic or technical vocabulary. It's less frequently encountered but may be valuable in specific contexts.