Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective That can be disregarded; ignorable.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

disregard +‎ -able

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Examples

  • You've all but stated that the DSM is just a catch-all for an unexplained phenomenon cause you have no proof that its a genuinely mental illness other than a circular argument about it being in the DSM while admitting that the absence of the comparable homosexuality in the DSM renders the DSM biased, useless and disregardable.

    A Nose By Any Other Name Would Smell Zoe Brain 2008

  • Basically, for Matt and J.B. and whomever else, their point of view is not only disregardable because of the lack of power any one person has over something like this, but the vehemence also belies the fact that they don't completely believe in what they are saying.

    egg meets the sidewalk 2007

  • In most ways, this thing is as usual disregardable and slightly annoying, but there were a few spots that hit home:

    Thanksgiving Etiquette | Seattle Metblogs 2005

  • The actual format, medium and language in which semantic information is encoded is often irrelevant and hence disregardable.

    Semantic Conceptions of Information Floridi, Luciano 2005

  • Edgar Wright makes a very assured second debut according to the IMDb his first debut 'Fistful of Fingers' featuring Jeremy Beadle looks disregardable.

    Feeling Listless - "Taking the credit for your second symphony." 2004

  • In short I think his comment - for all above stated - is easily disregardable.

    eHam.net News 2009

  • At the other extreme, any philosophical theory of semantic-factual information is supposed to be only weakly constrained, perhaps even completely underdetermined, by MTC, somewhat as tennis is constrained by Newtonian physics, that is in the most uninteresting, inconsequential and hence disregardable sense (see for example Sloman

    Semantic Conceptions of Information Floridi, Luciano 2005

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