different between sipid vs tastable
sipid
English
Etymology
See insipid, sapid.
Adjective
sipid (comparative more sipid, superlative most sipid)
- (obsolete) Having a taste or flavour; savoury; sapid.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Cockeram to this entry?)
Anagrams
- IPSID
sipid From the web:
- what sipid mean
- what does insipid mean
- what does sipid do
- sipid definition
- immunol definition
tastable
English
Alternative forms
- tasteable
Etymology
From Middle English tastable, taastable, equivalent to taste +? -able. Compare Old French tastable.
Adjective
tastable (comparative more tastable, superlative most tastable)
- That can be tasted; that can be detected by one's sense of taste.
References
- 2007, Günter Radden, René Dirven, Cognitive English grammar, page 284: "Conversion predicates of perception tend to be coded as adjectives: visible, audible, palpable and tangible, but English lacks adjectives such as *smellable and *tastable for something that can be smelled or tasted."
Anagrams
- abettals, statable
tastable From the web:
- what does testable means
- what is tastable mean
- what is a testable explanation
- testable examples
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