Alternative forms
edit
Etymology
edit
remove + -able
Adjective
edit
removable (not comparable)
- Able to be removed.
2005, John Kenneth Muir, An Analytical Guide to Television’s Battlestar Galactica, page 187:Molded by Mattel in forest green, this action figure was garbed in a removable yellow, sleeveless shawl. He is worth substantially more money if this filigree drapery is still intact.
2023 February 22, Howard Johnston, “Southern '313s': is the end now in sight?”, in RAIL, number 977, pages 42–43:The interior melamine panels were designed to be easily removable for repair or future refurbishment, and the linoleum floor was for easy cleaning.
Translations
edit
able to be removed
- Belarusian: здымны (zdymny)
- Bulgarian: отстраним (bg) (otstranim), сменяем (bg) (smenjaem)
- Catalan: desmuntable, extraïble
- Dutch: uitneembaar (nl)
- Finnish: irroitettava
- French: amovible (fr)
- Galician: extraíble (gl) m or f, extraíbel (gl) m or f
- Georgian: შეცვლადი (šecvladi), შენაცვლებადი (šenacvlebadi), გამოცვლადი (gamocvladi), ცვლადი (cvladi), მოხსნადი (moxsnadi), მოცილებადი (mocilebadi), მოშორებადი (mošorebadi)
- Greek: αφαιρετός (el) (afairetós), αφαιρέσιμος (el) (afairésimos), μετακινητός (metakinitós)
- Hungarian: eltávolítható
- Italian: amovibile (it), asportabile, estraibile (it), rimovibile (it), scalzabile, sfoderabile, staccabile
- Manx: yn-scughey, yn-arraghey
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: avtagbar, avtakbar
- Nynorsk: avtakbar
- Portuguese: extraível, removível
- Russian: съёмный (ru) (sʺjómnyj)
- Spanish: extraíble (es), de quita y pon (es)
- Tagalog: lagay-alis
|
removable (plural removables)
- Something that can be removed.