51Թ

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eradicable

[ ih-rad-i-kuh-buhl ]

adjective

  1. capable of being eradicated.


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Other 51Թ Forms

  • ·i·· adverb
  • ԴDze·i·· adjective
  • ܲe·i·· adjective
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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of eradicable1

1840–50; < Late Latin ŧī, equivalent to Latin ŧī ( ) to eradicate + - -able
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The International Task Force for Disease Eradication currently has eight diseases identified as potentially eradicable.

From

In the collective imagination, a tumor is a distinct and eradicable thing represented by a lump or mass.

From

That we have so effectively insulated ourselves from death should not be mistaken for evidence that death is, or should be, eradicable.

From

“Hepatitis B isn’t eradicated, but it is eradicable,” he told The Houston Chronicle in 2000.

From

I found, indeed, that the patient had a great many little troubles, dependent mainly on the state of a mind greatly harassed by constant reflex tendencies, not easily eradicable.

From

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