Advertisement

Advertisement

View definitions for enterable

enterable

adjective as in permeable

Discover More

Example Sentences

Processed foodstuffs, like chocolate, cookies, and canned goods, are usually enterable, since they are unlikely to contain pests or pathogens.

From Slate

It was built from 5,000 bricks that form an enterable space, with Lawrence’s Torn Asunder with a Spark from Above unexpectedly inscribed on the interior wall.

Groping for analogies, I observe that the remnant train tracks, either flush with paving stones or skulking beneath vegetation, lend an air of enterable Surrealist painting, a de Chirico or Magritte, with perfunctory human figures added for scale.

Enterable only after a prolonged novitiate, the adept then beheld an unfolding of the theosophy of the soul.

The sea was as different from the city as the air into which he had looked up at night—too different to compare against it and feel the contrast; on neither could he set foot; in neither could he be required to live and act—as now in this waste of enterable and pervious extent.

Advertisement

From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement