suspectable

suspectable

(səˈspɛktəbəl)
adj
that could be suspected
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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Parameter Description Value Reference [mu] Replacement and exit rate 0.011 [36] ([day.sup.-1]) [beta] Contact (transmission) rate of 0.15 [36] suspectable to be infected ([animal.sup.-1] [day.sup.-1]) [theta] Recovery rate of infected 0.16 Assumed animals [day.sup.-1] m Disease-induced mortality rate 0.041 Assumed ([day.sup.-1]) [eta] Cross-immune period 0.5 [36] [sigma] The average reinfection 0.06 Assumed probability of C(t) [delta] The average time of appearance 1 Assumed of new dominant clusters N The total number of population 345 Assumed
Performance is found highly suspectable both in terms of accuracy and false positives in case of network with low density.
Pick a sunny, sheltered spot away from areas suspectable to frost.
Mr Mughal said children's contact with technology from an early age without monitoring from parents could mean they are more suspectable to injury.
The study's author, Professor Julian Crane, said he was unable to determine how much paracetamol a child would have to take before becoming more suspectable to asthma or allergies.
This seems to be suspectable. As a common sense, considering the viscous dissipation, in the region where the shear rate is higher, the temperature rise should be more significant.
In act 5, scene 3, Cato again refashions himself by taking a "suspectable name" upon escaping, "Alexander Washington Napoleon Pompey Caesar" (40).
Suspectable persons 13 years of age or older should receive 2 doses, spaced a minimum of 4 weeks apart.
Put simply, it is suspectable that Rosser's "unified framework" based on Keynesian nonergodic dynamics can answer why does "the down phase of a long wave .