Resolvable

  • 41Dichromic — Di*chro mic, a. [Gr. ? two colored; di = di s twice + ? color.] Furnishing or giving two colors; said of defective vision, in which all the compound colors are resolvable into two elements instead of three. Sir J. Herschel. [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 42Indecomposable — In*de com*pos a*ble, a. [Pref. in not + decomposable: cf. F. ind[ e]composable.] Not decomposable; incapable or difficult of decomposition; not resolvable into its constituents or elements. [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 43Irresolvable — Ir re*solv a*ble, a. [Pref. ir not + resolvable. Cf. {Irresoluble}.] Incapable of being resolved; not separable into component parts. [1913 Webster] {Irresolvable nebul[ae]} (Astron.), nebul[ae] of a cloudlike appearance, which have not yet been… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 44Irresolvable nebulae — Irresolvable Ir re*solv a*ble, a. [Pref. ir not + resolvable. Cf. {Irresoluble}.] Incapable of being resolved; not separable into component parts. [1913 Webster] {Irresolvable nebul[ae]} (Astron.), nebul[ae] of a cloudlike appearance, which have… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 45Resolvability — Re*solv a*bil i*ty (r? z?lv ? b?l ? t?), n. The quality or condition of being resolvable; resolvableness. [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 46Resolvableness — Re*solv a*ble*ness, n. The quality of being resolvable; resolvability. [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 47visual acuity — noun Date: 1889 the relative ability of the visual organ to resolve detail that is usually expressed as the reciprocal of the minimum angular separation in minutes of two lines just resolvable as separate and that forms in the average human eye… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 48resolve — I. verb (resolved; resolving) Etymology: Middle English, from Latin resolvere to unloose, dissolve, from re + solvere to loosen, release more at solve Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. obsolete dissolve, melt 2 …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 49Charles Peirce — Infobox Scientist name = Charles Peirce box width = image size = 200px caption = Charles Peirce birth date = September 10, 1839 birth place = Cambridge, Massachusetts death date = April 19, 1914 death place = residence = citizenship = nationality …

    Wikipedia

  • 50Document Type Definition — (DTD) is a set of markup declarations that define a document type for SGML family markup languages (SGML, XML, HTML). DTDs were a precursor to XML schema and have a similar function, although different capabilities. DTDs use a terse formal syntax …

    Wikipedia