registrable


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reg·is·ter

 (rĕj′ĭ-stər)
n.
1.
a. A formal or official recording of items, names, or actions.
b. A book for such entries.
c. An entry in such a record.
2. The act of registering.
3. A device that automatically records a quantity or number.
4. Computers A part of the central processing unit used as a storage location.
5. An adjustable, grill-like device through which heated or cooled air is released into a room.
6. A state of proper alignment: to be in register.
7. Printing
a. Exact alignment of the lines and margins on the opposite sides of a leaf.
b. Proper positioning of colors in color printing.
8. Music
a. The range of an instrument or a voice.
b. A part of such a range.
c. A group of matched organ pipes; a stop.
9. A variety or level of language used in a specific social setting: speaking in an informal register; writing in a scientific register.
v. reg·is·tered, reg·is·ter·ing, reg·is·ters
v.tr.
1.
a. To enter in an official register.
b. To enroll officially or formally, especially in order to vote or attend classes.
2.
a. To set down in writing: registered the events of the day in his diary.
b. To express or make known: registered his dissatisfaction with the chef.
3.
a. To indicate (data). Used of an instrument or scale.
b. To be indicated as: The earthquake registered 6.8 on the Richter scale.
4. To give outward signs of; express: Her face registered surprise.
5. To attain or achieve: registered a new high in sales.
6. To cause (mail) to be officially recorded and specially handled by payment of a fee.
7. To adjust so as to be properly aligned.
v.intr.
1. To place or cause placement of one's name in a register.
2. To have one's name officially placed on a list of eligible voters.
3. To enroll as a student.
4. To have a list of gifts for preferred wedding presents, as at a store. Used of a couple.
5. To be indicated on an instrument or a scale.
6. To be shown or expressed, as on the face: The teacher's reprimand did not register on the students' faces.
7. To make an impression; be recorded in the mind: The warning failed to register.
8. To be in proper alignment.

[Middle English registre, from Old French, from Medieval Latin registrum, alteration of Late Latin regesta, from Latin, neuter pl. past participle of regerere, to record : re-, re- + gerere, to carry.]

reg′is·ter·er n.
reg′is·tra·ble (-ĭ-strə-bəl) adj.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

registrable

(ˈrɛdʒɪstrəbəl)
adj
capable of being registered. Also (less commonly): registerable
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
Translations
References in periodicals archive ?
Both agencies also agreed to establish channels of communication to facilitate technical consultations on matters related to innovation, including on new and emerging technologies that are registrable with the BOI.
Under this legal framework, the surrogate mother would be the registrable mother as contemplated by the Civil Register Act.
In a letter to Parliamentary Standards commissioner Kathryn Stone he said: "This declaration related to a one-off change in my registrable interests brought on by my appointment to the Government on 9 July 2018.
'In view of the above, both factions (AAEUN and AAWUN) are hereby directed to meet and come up with a registrable name in compliance with Section 27 of the Trade Unions Act CAP.T14 (LFN) 2004.
As a consequence, many registrable properties remain registered in the names of the deceased.
Estos "casos" se definieron, para los fines del presente trabajo, como abscesos y lesiones granulomatosas de ganglios linfaticos mandibulares, subparotideos, retrofaringeos y tejidos blandos de cabeza y cuello, con presentaciones que abarcaron casos activos, con aumento de tamano, registrable por inspeccion, con o sin presencia de exudados y fistulizaciones.
By contrast, a colour cannot in and of itself be registrable as a trade-mark.
The Working Party accepted that the scope of registrable trade mark
But, the growth was barely registrable -- signaling overall weakness for media ad growth once midterm election dollars are removed from the data.
The company may have been better served by branding the product with a registrable trademark before investing in a significant consumer awareness program.