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Meanings of quite practicable in English
We have no meanings for "quite practicable" in our records yet.
Usage of quite practicable in English
1
A drastic elimination of the creatures would be quitepracticable.
2
This would have been quitepracticable, had not their errand become known to Bonaparte.
3
On the other hand, for the profit of the law-courts, I have a quitepracticable notion.
4
What you suggest is quitepracticable.
5
George said Mesopotamia was too much out of our way, but that the Berlin-Dresden route was quitepracticable.
6
The scheme was quitepracticable.
7
Now, Dessauer being bald and quitepracticable as to his topknot, they endued him with the full dress of a monk.
8
But, when I saw that the entrance was quitepracticable, I gave orders not to fire any more, which they obeyed.
9
I reckoned then we should have eight hours to swim before sunrise, an operation quitepracticable if we relieved each other.
10
Heavy and clumsy as are the large single-tube tires, it is quitepracticable to carry an extra one, though we did not.
11
Flight would have been quitepracticable, if Ned Land had been able to take possession of the boat without the Captain's knowledge.
12
Would it not be quitepracticable to engage the men for the whole season and to pay them weekly?-It would be quitepracticable.
13
To be sure these keys, being formed by different successions of quarter-tones, are practically inexhaustible, and the 16,000 keys of Krishna are quitepracticable.
14
"All this is quitepracticable."
15
"The scheme, monsieur," said Montignac, quietly, not disclosing to the governor the slightest resentment at the latter's ridicule, "is quitepracticable.