Patible

Word PATIBLE
Character 7
Hyphenation pat i ble
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Patible"

What do we mean by patible?

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word patible. Define patible, patible synonyms, patible pronunciation, patible translation, English dictionary definition of patible.

Not compatible online; incapable of harmonious online coexistance, regardless of compatibility offline. Generally useful in terms of social networking, message board, or e-mail communications. Urban Dictionary

Synonyms and Antonyms for Patible

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The word "patible" in example sentences

Trouble was, the cut-out and the circuitry the Chiba clinics put in weren't com - patible. ❋ Boudreau Freret (2010)

The Federal land and interests in land reserved are encompassed in the entire 840 mile Pacific coastline, which is the smallest area com-patible with the proper care and management of the objects to be protected. ❋ Clinton, Bill, 1946- (2000)

Any more than they can, in my opinic make the compelled union of two completely inco: patible persons right. ❋ Westleigh, Sarah (1996)

Those forms of rule considered to be incom - patible with liberty are represented as simple; those that incorporate it, as complex. ❋ MELVIN RICHTER (1968)

To have followed Saint Francis 'rule in its full rigor, without buildings, books, or amenities of any kind, was incom - patible with the organization which its numbers and role demanded. ❋ GORDON LEFF (1968)

To the extent that other movements are ideological or scholastic, structuralism may be incom - patible with them, but since there is as yet no coherent and worked-out set of propositions to constitute struc - turalism “officially,” but only a series of suggestive and mutually reinforcing conjectures whose empirical justifications are drawn from a number of different disciplines, many other positions (although not all) may prove to be compatible with it. ❋ PETER CAWS (1968)

It is usually advocated on naturalist or materialist grounds, and assailed on the ground that it is incom - patible with the freedom of the will, and therefore with moral responsibility. ❋ ALAN DONAGAN (1968)

Such latitude was clearly incom patible with the traditional criteria of beauty. ❋ HERBERT DIECKMANN (1968)

Socialist and anarchist hostility to the state feeds on two beliefs that are different from one another though often confused: that the state is an instrument for the oppression of some classes by others, and that any vast and highly centralized structure of authority is incom - patible with individual freedom and genuine democ - racy. ❋ JOHN PLAMENATZ (1968)

Epicurean showed a sensitivity to the highest as well as the lowest in Epicureanism, which was not incom - patible with at least an aesthetic interest in Christi - anity. ❋ PAMELA M. HUBY (1968)

It is likewise incom - patible with some, but not all, interpretations of the causal principle. ❋ THOMAS A. GOUDGE (1968)

Most wars, according to Bentham, are caused by passion or ambition and in either case the remedy lies basically in an appeal to reason, supplemented in the first instance by justice and in the second by self-interest (wars are not com - patible with enlightened self-interest). ❋ ELIZABETH FLOWER (1968)

It is true that since the nineteenth century this kind of thermodynamics has been deemed com - patible with an atomic, or rather molecular structure of the substances which compose the system (Bochner, p. 160). ❋ SALOMON BOCHNER (1968)

He found that, although the invariance of the velocity of light is com - patible with the idea of worldwide simultaneity for all observers at relative rest, those in uniform relative motion would, in general, be led to assign different times to the same event and that a moving clock would appear to run slow compared with an identical clock at rest with respect to the observer. ❋ G. J. WHITROW (1968)

This section, together with that deriding the Inquisition, is incom - patible with the image of Montesquieu as a self-serving parlementaire concerned to defend the privileges of his class. ❋ MELVIN RICHTER (1968)

This is because the theory leads us to reject the classical rigid body concept, since it implies the in - stantaneous transmission of a disturbance through the body from one end to the other, and this is incom - patible with the basic assumption that no signal can travel faster than light. ❋ G. J. WHITROW (1968)

There can be no doubt that Stapleton exercised an influence over her which may have been love or may have been fear, or very possibly both, since they are by no means incom - patible emotions. ❋ Doyle, Arthur Conan, Sir, 1859-1930 (1926)

Although we were [good enough] of friends [in real life], we soon realized that we were in.com/patible and had to take our relationship entirely [offline]. ❋ Girlyboo (2011)

Cross Reference for Patible

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