C1 verb Formell

subjectable

/səbˈdʒɛktəbəl/

To be capable of being placed under or made to undergo a particular action, process, or condition. It describes the state of being liable or open to certain treatments or influences, such as legal scrutiny or scientific testing.

Beispiele

3 von 5
1

The new alloy is subjectable to extreme temperatures without losing its structural integrity.

The new metal mix can be put through very high heat without breaking.

2

All government expenditures are subjectable to a rigorous public audit once every fiscal year.

Every piece of government spending can be checked by a strict official review yearly.

3

I don't think your theory is subjectable to any kind of real-world test.

I do not believe your idea can be tried out in a real situation.

Wortfamilie

Nomen
subjection
Verb
subject
Adverb
subjectably
Adjektiv
subjectable
Verwandt
subject
💡

Merkhilfe

Think of the suffix '-able' (capable of) added to 'subject'. If you can 'subject' someone to a test, they are 'subjectable'.

Schnelles Quiz

The data gathered in the experiment is ________ to further analysis by the board.

Richtig!

Die richtige Antwort ist: subjectable

Beispiele

1

The new alloy is subjectable to extreme temperatures without losing its structural integrity.

everyday

The new metal mix can be put through very high heat without breaking.

2

All government expenditures are subjectable to a rigorous public audit once every fiscal year.

formal

Every piece of government spending can be checked by a strict official review yearly.

3

I don't think your theory is subjectable to any kind of real-world test.

informal

I do not believe your idea can be tried out in a real situation.

4

In this study, the participants were considered subjectable to the influence of visual stimuli in a controlled environment.

academic

In this research, the people involved could be affected by images in a specific room.

5

The terms of this contract are subjectable to renegotiation if the market conditions shift significantly.

business

The agreement can be discussed again if the economy changes a lot.

Wortfamilie

Nomen
subjection
Verb
subject
Adverb
subjectably
Adjektiv
subjectable
Verwandt
subject

Häufige Kollokationen

subjectable to scrutiny able to be examined closely
subjectable to change capable of being altered
subjectable to testing able to be experimented on
subjectable to audit capable of being officially checked
subjectable to laws bound by legal regulations

Häufige Phrasen

subjectable to review

pending an official second look

subjectable to pressure

likely to react to force

subjectable to interpretation

capable of being understood in different ways

Wird oft verwechselt mit

subjectable vs subjective

Subjective refers to personal opinions or feelings, while subjectable refers to the capability of being subjected to a process.

subjectable vs subjected

Subjected is the past tense of the verb (it already happened), whereas subjectable means it has the potential to happen.

📝

Nutzungshinweise

The word is almost always followed by the preposition 'to'. It is primarily used in formal, technical, or legal writing to describe the potential for a process to occur.

⚠️

Häufige Fehler

Learners often use 'subjective' by mistake when they mean something can be tested or changed. They also sometimes forget the 'to' that must follow it.

💡

Merkhilfe

Think of the suffix '-able' (capable of) added to 'subject'. If you can 'subject' someone to a test, they are 'subjectable'.

📖

Wortherkunft

From the Latin 'subicere' meaning 'to place under', combined with the English suffix '-able' indicating capacity.

Grammatikmuster

adjective-based usage followed by the preposition 'to' often used with passive constructions

Schnelles Quiz

The data gathered in the experiment is ________ to further analysis by the board.

Richtig!

Die richtige Antwort ist: subjectable

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