Measurable in a sentence as an adjective

A few ms increase in latency has a measurable effect on your income, as people just close the webpage and click elsewhere.

There's plenty of research published about how burnout is measurable and related to the HPA axis -- you don't have to take my word for it.

I think there is a real and measurable communication problem in technology teams between age groups.

"Thus the irony that groups have never successfully lived without one for any measurable period of time.

Something I thought slightly peculiar given that he was supposed to be investing his own, significant funds along with B. Plus, I don't believe that he actually did any measurable work during the time period that would justify it based on what I knew at the time.

[1] "Sub-clinical" usually means "not measurable," but in the case of "burnout" and adrenal fatigue, it is absolutely measurable.

None of the actual metrics of the site bear this out. I don't know what "myspacing" is, and "floundering" is pretty subjective, but in terms of actual measurable things, we have more questions asked, more questions answered, more people active on the site, more sites with more activity and most metrics are up about 100% in the last year.

I measure my work in quality, maintainability, measurable evidence.

The work was advanced enough mathematically to address measurable selection, solved a real problem, and made some contributions to making such calculations faster.

Malevolent curiosity is a powerful motivator having nothing to do with money or measurable personal benefit.

This is a very interesting essay, if for no other reason that when smart people observe that other smart people have mental blocks against believing the truth of measurable features of material reality, that suggests a market inefficiency.

Measurable definitions

adjective

capable of being measured; "measurable depths"

See also: mensurable

adjective

of distinguished importance; "a measurable figure in literature"