From the fact that, in the sentences, the penitents are told that they are not to go out of their prisons or their houses without the sanbenito, it is inferable that it was not worn within doors.
It is inferable from this, that the people, distrusting the leniency of the Inquisition, discouraged application to it, and sought rather to obtain satisfaction extra-judicially.
That it did not neglect the opportunity is fairly inferable from the opposition excited.
That the case was seriously considered is inferablefrom the fact that it was suspended, not dismissed, and remained of record against the child in case of future offences.
Hence it is inferable that on living organisms, which form an assemblage of this kind, and are unceasingly exposed in common to the agencies composing their inorganic environments, there must be wrought two such sets of effects.
Hence it is inferable that somewhere between centre and surface in the supposed larger spheroid, there will arise that state described by Prof.
If, as above contended, it is inferable from the process by which a nebulous spheroid was formed, that its outer portions revolved with greater angular velocities than its inner; then the inference which Prof.
In the first place, mark what is inferable from the distribution of nebulæ.
The necessities for a nutritive system, a respiratory system, and a vascular system, in all animals of size and vivacity, seem to us legitimately inferable from the conditions to continued vital activity.
From some passages it is inferable that he considers the "presence of mind" to be everywhere needful.
Taken as a problem in logic, the answer is, of course, that absolutely nothing in the way of abstract mental content is inferable from the mere fact that we can use intelligently words of which the meaning is abstract.
All that is inferable from language is that two instances of a universal, even when they differ very greatly, may cause the utterance of two instances of the same word which only differ very slightly.
The like antedating is inferable for the whole record of the rocks.
Breadth is inferable solely from the fact that the line is seen at all, and relative size by difference of insistency.
In the first place, mark what is inferablefrom the distribution of nebulae.
And now observe, finally, the fact, alike inferable a priori and illustrated in experience, that an ascending incongruity not only fails to cause laughter, but works on the muscular system an effect of exactly the reverse kind.
Thus we have here a connection of two propositions, which does not depend upon whether they are to be asserted or denied, but only upon the second being inferable from the first.
Secondly, if this cannot be known, can we know that other objects, inferable from objects of sense but not necessarily resembling them, exist either when we are perceiving the objects of sense or at any other time?
Leavenworth's camp, which occupied a high bluff, the attention of the Sioux was arrested by their advance, and it was inferable from the friendly answering shouts which they gave, that the mission was received with joy.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "inferable" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.