Determinate in a sentence as an adjective

> has non-determinate behavior, depending on the host system..Care to provide details?

What they are claiming is that you have a presence of violent right-wing elements among the protesters, in some non-determinate numbers, and that they are organized.

> Are Norwegians ok with this?I gather most of them are, but you're missing part of the sentence: he's been sentenced to "forvaring", aka "indeterminate penalty".

Of course, you neglect that genetic diversity is not the only, or even the primary determinate of whether we have "Hitlerbabies" or Churchills.

I'm not saying that you shouldn't architect that way, I'm just giving reasons why you might not.>semi-determinate, constrained by the user's patience and willingness to upgradeThe user can vaguely determine it, but you can't.

Minnesota pioneered determinate sentencing based on severity of the crime and the offender's criminal history[1] and Minnesota has three decades of history with declining to imprison minor drug offenders.

Contrary to the idea that expressions and meaning were culturally determinate, the research is fairly overwhelming that despite differences in culture, language, and even physical face characteristics, microexpressions and the emotions represented are consistent.

Determinate definitions

adjective

precisely determined or limited or defined; especially fixed by rule or by a specific and constant cause; "a determinate distance"; "a determinate number"; "determinate variations in animals"

adjective

not continuing to grow indefinitely at the apex; "determinate growth"

adjective

supplying or being a final or conclusive settlement; "a definitive verdict"; "a determinate answer to the problem"

See also: definitive