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eradicable

[ ih-rad-i-kuh-buhl ]

adjective

  1. capable of being eradicated.


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Other Words From

  • e·radi·ca·bly adverb
  • none·radi·ca·ble adjective
  • une·radi·ca·ble adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of eradicable1

1840–50; < Late Latin ērādīcābilis, equivalent to Latin ērādīc ( āre ) to eradicate + -ābilis -able
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Example Sentences

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

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

From US News

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

From Forbes

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

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.

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