Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- That may be created.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- adjective That may be created.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective That can be
created .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word creatable.
Examples
-
I asume many sl artists won't be that charmed by the limitations though no user creatable content.
New answers and more questions regarding the upcoming virtual world Blue Mars Bettina Tizzy 2009
-
Were God to know immediately the plurality of creatable objects (essences), His simplicity and unity
-
There are no genuine formulae to guarantee healing, but there are creatable environments that allow for healing.
-
But in fact, William argues that this option was not open to God: a world without a beginning is simply not a creatable item.
William of Auvergne Lewis, Neil 2008
-
For, otherwise, we are compelled to confess that God understands an infinite number of creatable things, which he will never be able to create, for, if he created all that he understands, he would, according to this showing, exhaust his omnipotence, and render himself imperfect.
The Ethics 2007
-
“Resources are not by definition finite, many are indeed renewable and creatable – organic, intellectual, and mutable.”
-
Sergeante E: Resources are not by definition finite, many are indeed renewable and creatable – organic, intellectual, and mutable.
-
Equality I would say is creatable and viable, however it is equality of options not equality of choices, Women are geneally weaker than men, if we can meet the standards for things like firemen/people then this should be open to us, similarly if a man can meet the standards for teaching, nursery care etc then he should have that option open to him.
Court Strongly Rejects “Choice For Men” Civil Rights Lawsuit 2006
-
This is perhaps not so far out as it might seem; on some medieval accounts of omniscience, for instance, divine knowledge of enunciables, i.e., propositions, is an entirely incidental result of the arguments that God has flawless self-knowledge and practical, non-propositional knowledge of things as creatable -- to put it crudely and a little misleadingly, divine know-how.
Interesting Links 2005
-
This is perhaps not so far out as it might seem; on some medieval accounts of omniscience, for instance, divine knowledge of enunciables, i.e., propositions, is an entirely incidental result of the arguments that God has flawless self-knowledge and practical, non-propositional knowledge of things as creatable -- to put it crudely and a little misleadingly, divine know-how.
Archive 2005-11-01 2005
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.