Discernible in a sentence as an adjective

No real resolution to it, no motive, no discernible point.

Printing money has had no discernible impact on inflation over the past 5 years.

What little is discernible, is simply wrong:* He didn't ever warn the British that they couldn't disarm us.

Not paying your fair share isn't contrary to the spirit of tax law because there is no discernible spirit of the tax law.

"weve seen no discernible increase in piracy on any of our titles" [...] "The move has been a hugely positive one for us" [...] "were still pleased that we took this step"

Similarly to above the volume at each price level doesn't appear to have any discernible pattern.

There is no discernible difference, to them, between feeding someone and saving their soul, save the greater importance of the latter.

You've got scrappy startup programmers and 7-11 clerks and toilet-plunging janitors and people kept on a government payroll for no discernible reason, right?

Twitter, Facebook et al are going down the same road: many ephemeral eyeballs with no discernible path to the kind of profitability tech sector investors expect.

Credit to them I suppose as they backed down fast after the next use of the "home wiring" line was met with me asking if they wanted the paperwork on the specs of the new wiring that had made zero discernible difference.

Discernible definitions

adjective

perceptible by the senses or intellect; "things happen in the earth and sky with no discernible cause"; "the newspaper reports no discernible progress in the negotiations"; "the skyline is easily discernible even at a distance of several miles"

See also: discernable

adjective

capable of being perceived clearly; "an essay with a meaning that was not always discernible"

adjective

capable of being seen or noticed; "a discernible change in attitude"; "a clearly evident erasure in the manuscript"; "an observable change in behavior"

See also: evident observable