Langimage
English

integratable

|in-te-gra-ta-ble|

C1

🇺🇸

/ɪnˌtɛɡrəˈteɪtəbəl/

🇬🇧

/ɪnˌtɛɡrəˈteɪtəb(ə)l/

capable of being made whole / merged

Etymology
Etymology Information

'integratable' originates from Latin, specifically the verb 'integrare' (related to 'integer'), where 'integer' meant 'whole'.

Historical Evolution

'integratable' changed from Latin 'integrare' and Medieval/Modern Latin forms such as 'integratus' into the verb and adjective forms in English ('integrate', 'integrable'), and the less common adjective formation 'integratable' was later formed in English from these roots.

Meaning Changes

Initially, the root meant 'to make whole' or 'whole' in Latin; over time this evolved into English senses relating to 'making whole' and the modern adjectival meaning 'capable of being integrated' (including the mathematical sense 'capable of being integrated').

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

capable of being integrated or combined into a larger whole; able to be joined or incorporated with other parts or systems.

The new module is integratable with the company's legacy systems, allowing data to flow between them.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Adjective 2

in mathematics: capable of being integrated (i.e., having a definite integral or being integrable over a domain).

On that interval the function is integratable, so we can compute its definite integral.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Last updated: 2026/01/11 02:53