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1 plausible
plausible [plozibl]adjective* * *plozibladjectif plausible* * *plozibl adj* * *plausible adj plausible.[plozibl] adjectifpas très ou peu plausible implausible -
2 plausible Gründe
plausible Gründe
ostensible reasons -
3 plausible
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4 plausible
adj.1 acceptable (admisible).2 plausible (posible).* * *► adjetivo1 (admirable) commendable2 (recomendable) advisable3 (probable) plausible* * *adj.* * *ADJ1) [argumento, motivo] acceptable, admissible2) [comportamiento, intento, esfuerzo] commendable, praiseworthy* * *a) <motivo/razón> acceptable, validb) ( loable) commendable, praiseworthy* * *= plausible.Ex. This incompleteness of search and retrieval therefore makes possible, and plausible, the existence of undiscovered public knowledge.* * *a) <motivo/razón> acceptable, validb) ( loable) commendable, praiseworthy* * *= plausible.Ex: This incompleteness of search and retrieval therefore makes possible, and plausible, the existence of undiscovered public knowledge.
* * *1 ‹motivo/razón› acceptable, valid2 (loable) commendable, praiseworthy* * *
plausible adjetivo
1 (encomiable) laudable, praiseworthy
2 (admisible) valid: dame una razón plausible para hacerlo, give me one good reason to do it
3 (probable, digno de crédito) plausible: no me dio una excusa plausible, he didn't give me a plausible excuse
' plausible' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
verosímil
English:
justification
- plausible
- plausibly
* * *plausible adj1. [admirable] praiseworthy2. [admisible] acceptable3. [posible] plausible* * *adj plausible -
5 plausible
[ˈplɔːzəbl] adjective1) seeming reasonable or convincing:شِبْه مَعْقولa plausible excuse.
2) clever at talking persuasively but not to be trusted:مَقْبول، مُقْنِع لكنه غيْر مَوثوقa plausible fellow.
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6 plausible
adj plausible -
7 plausible
• colorable• feasible• plausible• possible -
8 plausible conflict situation
Military: PCSУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > plausible conflict situation
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9 compendium of plausible materiel options
Military: CPMOУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > compendium of plausible materiel options
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10 hypothèse plausible
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > hypothèse plausible
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11 plausibile
plausible* * *plausibile agg.1 plausible; acceptable, convincing, credible: una ragione plausibile, a plausible reason; prove poco plausibili, unconvincing proof; dammi una spiegazione più plausibile dell'accaduto, give me a more acceptable explanation of what happened* * *[plau'zibile]aggettivo [scusa, storia] plausible* * *plausibile/plau'zibile/[scusa, storia] plausible. -
12 plausibel
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13 trúligur
plausible, plausible -
14 навидум вистинит
plausible* * *plausible 1 -
15 остварлив
plausible, feasible feasibly* * *plausible, feasible feasibly -
16 правдоподобное рассуждение
plausible argument мат., plausible reasoningРусско-английский научно-технический словарь Масловского > правдоподобное рассуждение
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17 правдоподобный
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18 умеющий внушать доверие
plausible имя прилагательное:Русско-английский синонимический словарь > умеющий внушать доверие
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19 kreibel
plausible [adj]; plausible [adj] -
20 правдоподобное объяснение
правдоподобное объяснение
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[А.С.Гольдберг. Англо-русский энергетический словарь. 2006 г.]Тематики
EN
Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > правдоподобное объяснение
См. также в других словарях:
plausible — [ plozibl ] adj. • 1552; lat. plausibilis « digne d être applaudi » ♦ Qui semble devoir être admis. ⇒ admissible, vraisemblable. Caractère plausible d un événement. Cause, raison très plausible. ⇒ probable. « Ce motif n était pas le véritable,… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Plausible deniability — is, at root, credible (plausible) ability to deny a fact or allegation, or to deny previous knowledge of a fact. The term most often refers to the denial of blame in (formal or informal) chains of command, where upper rungs quarantine the blame… … Wikipedia
Plausible — Plau si*ble, a. [L. plausibilis praiseworthy, from plaudere, plausum, to applaud, clap the hands, strike, beat.] 1. Worthy of being applauded; praiseworthy; commendable; ready. [Obs.] Bp. Hacket. [1913 Webster] 2. Obtaining approbation;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
plausible — plausible, credible, believable, colorable, specious are comparable when they mean capable of impressing the observer, auditor, or reader as truly or genuinely possessing the quality or character that is set forth or claimed. A thing or sometimes … New Dictionary of Synonyms
plausible — PLAUSIBLE. adj. de tout genre. Specieux, qui peut passer pour bon. Il ne se dit guere que des raisons, des pretextes. Raison plausible. pretexte plausible … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
plausible — [plô′zə bəl] adj. [L plausibilis < plaudere, to applaud] 1. seemingly true, acceptable, etc.: often implying disbelief 2. seemingly honest, trustworthy, etc.: often implying distrust plausibility n. plausibleness plausibly adv. SYN. PLAUSIBLE… … English World dictionary
Plausible Denial — (copyright 1991, published by Thunder s Mouth Press, New York, NY, ISBN 1 56025 000 3) is the title of a book by American lawyer, Mark Lane that chronicles his legal defense of Victor Marchetti, a former CIA agent who chose to publicly disclose… … Wikipedia
plausible — ► ADJECTIVE 1) seeming reasonable or probable. 2) skilled at producing persuasive or deceptive arguments: a plausible liar. DERIVATIVES plausibility noun plausibly adverb. ORIGIN originally in the sense «deserving applause»: from Latin plaudere… … English terms dictionary
plausible — I adjective accepted, apparent, arguable, believable, cogitable, colorable, commanding belief, conceivable, conjecturable, convincing, credible, defensible, demanding belief, deserving belief, feasible, grantable, imaginable, justifiable,… … Law dictionary
plausible excuse — index alibi Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
plausible — (adj.) 1540s, acceptable, agreeable, from L. plausibilis deserving applause, acceptable, from pp. stem of plaudere to applaud (see PLAUDIT (Cf. plaudit)). Meaning having the appearance of truth is recorded from 1560s. Related: Plausibility;… … Etymology dictionary