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trackable查看 trackable 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
trackable查看 trackable 在Google字典中的解释Google英翻中〔查看〕
trackable查看 trackable 在Yahoo字典中的解释Yahoo英翻中〔查看〕





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  • traceable vs trackable: What is the difference (if any)?
    trackable = (en adjective) Able to be tracked, or worthy of being tracked traceable = (en adjective) Capable of being traced; possible to track down
  • Is the word trackable used correctly here? - English Language Usage . . .
    Perhaps traceable is better than trackable Trackable implies an ability to find in the present, and doesn't necessarily imply knowledge of past locations (although in context it might)
  • transatlantic differences - Whats a word for a small rural property . . .
    If by any chance any of you are Portuguese speakers, I am looking for a word that would be an equivalent to the Brazilian Portuguese term chácara In this kind of rural property, no cattle are rais
  • Which is correct: troubleshooted or troubleshot?
    Troubleshooted is not a word, but troubleshot is Is this really the correct word to use? I always feel like saying: I troubleshooted it vs I troubleshot it For some reason, it just doesn't
  • differences - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    What is the difference between increase, growth, go up and rise? And what is the difference between decline, fall, go down and drop? I really don't know which is the best to describe parts of a gra
  • Word suggestion for items that can be labelled with a serial number and . . .
    3 You could use trackable for those that can be labelled, and not trackable, nontrackable, or untrackable for those that can From thefreedictionary com: Adj 1 trackable - capable of being traced or tracked; Although now that I've typed untrackable, untraceable comes to mind, but I'm not sure it means quite what you want
  • word usage - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    You've asked a lot of questions about cross checking etc, but there isn't a simple difference Some people will call a thing cross-checking, others will call it cross-referencing In some organizations there are procedures with defined names; in other organizations (like maybe the police) there are particular usages that are traditional But in general, I wouldn't worry about the difference
  • What does “bupkes” mean? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    There was the following passage in the New Yorker 's (August 27) article titled, “A scandal at the C I A May be ” : In January I (David Shafer, novelist) filed a Freedom of Information Act request with the C I A , asking for any information relating to my grandfather and Thomas Whittemore and the events of June 1950 They took two months to give me bupkes But to give me bupkes, they were
  • initialised or initialized which one is correct spelling?
    The variant of initialize with an s is the British spelling; the one with a z is standard American See here If you’re British, you’re likely to use the s variant If you’re an American (like me), you’ll use the z variant Incidentally, many words that replace a z with an s tend to be British spelling, like “realise ” [American variant=realize]
  • Thru vs. through - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Slang is “very informal usage in vocabulary and idiom that is characteristically more metaphorical, playful, elliptical, vivid, and ephemeral than ordinary language” Since thru is the exact same word as through, it cannot possibly be considered slang Spelling is always an approximation anyway; spoken language is primary Now, if you and your friends used bazinga to mean "through", that





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