different between disqualify vs disqualifiable
disqualify
English
Etymology
From dis- +? qualify
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /d?s?kw?l?fa?/
Verb
disqualify (third-person singular simple present disqualifies, present participle disqualifying, simple past and past participle disqualified)
- (transitive) To make ineligible for something.
- My age disqualifies me for the position.
- (transitive) To exclude from consideration by the explicit revocation of a previous qualification.
- The athlete was disqualified after performance-enhancing drugs were found in his hotel room.
Related terms
- disqualification
Translations
disqualify From the web:
- what disqualify you from donating plasma
- what disqualify you from getting a stimulus check
- what disqualify you from getting a passport
- what disqualify you from donating blood
- what disqualify you from second stimulus check
- what disqualify you from joining the army
- what disqualify you from getting a gun
- what disqualifies you from unemployment
disqualifiable
English
Etymology
disqualify +? -able
Adjective
disqualifiable (comparative more disqualifiable, superlative most disqualifiable)
- Able to be disqualified.
Related terms
- qualifiable
- qualify
disqualifiable From the web:
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- disqualify vs disqualifiable
- picotiter vs microtiter
- micropositioning vs micropositioner
- magnetometer vs magnetometry
- exoglucanase vs endoglucanase
- acl vs all
- ablephary vs ablepharia
- ablepharon vs ablepharia
- emarginate vs emargination
- vulcanize vs volcanize
- cybertronics vs cybertronic
- cybereducator vs cybereducation
- oxymyoglobin vs deoxymyoglobin
- denticular vs denticle
- cytocompatibility vs cytocompatible
- why vs forthy
- cyclopsam vs cyclopel
- caudodorsal vs caudodorsally
- bradykinetic vs bradykinesia
- biostratigraphy vs biochronology