Provable in a sentence as an adjective

But let's move on, because who the bots belong to isn't provable.

The law doesn't work on absolutely provable certainty.

Can we go on and on with specific, provable differences which make the NK citizen's experience far more horrifying?

There is a vast difference between 'two words have a statistically provable correspondence' and 'two words are understood as the same word.

I think it's time for me to write a blog post entitled "on the provable security of spiped".Seriously, we know how to build secure cryptographic protocols.

It is far too easy to invent a new corporate person with little or no visible or even provable connection to any natural person.

For younger developers it's the cowboy who thinks they know more than they really know and will waste a lot of time reinventing wheels, chasing things already known not to work for provable reasons, etc.

The reason public policy is hard to take a seriously as a scientific endeavour is that it isn't often provable, although with open data would certainly improve it.

" Many Apps videos have zero views & zero installs so this twice thing is a provable lie- "Once we complete our review of the final entries, we will post our findings here"Will you revoke the 1 Million prize given to an Ex-Salesforce architect who had Demoed this app at a Meet-up 2 weeks before the Open of the Hackathon?

If you sold some artwork you made in your basement and were then defrauded by chargebacks from your payment processor, would you be required to prove that your "artwork" has value in order to claim damages?The fact that you sold if for an amount agreed upon by you and the buyer is what matters, not any provable intrinsic value the thing being sold may have.

Provable definitions

adjective

capable of being demonstrated or proved; "obvious lies"; "a demonstrable lack of concern for the general welfare"; "practical truth provable to all men"- Walter Bagehot

See also: demonstrable