The correct spelling of the adjective, from measure, is measurable (weighable, quantifiable).
Measurable.
my standard measurement is 6 feet high
Measureable phenomena occur in the natural world. A phenomenon is a happening, and measureable means it can be measured. For example, rain is a phenomenon, and it is measureable because you can put a rain gauge in the garden and measure how much falls. If it's an inch, that means 3630 cubic feet of water fell on the acre that you are in.
Concrete.
"Measurable" is an adjective, and English adjectives do not distinguish between plural and singular.
You could describe any measurable characteristic as a trait.
The correct spelling is measurable and not measureable.
my standard measurement is 6 feet high
No, there are only two e's in measurable, able to be measured.
The 'e' isn't necessary to the pronunciation of the word. Together, 'ea' would imply a hard 'ee' sound (like in beach, reach, teach). The spelling 'measureable' would more likely cause confusion.
Measureable phenomena occur in the natural world. A phenomenon is a happening, and measureable means it can be measured. For example, rain is a phenomenon, and it is measureable because you can put a rain gauge in the garden and measure how much falls. If it's an inch, that means 3630 cubic feet of water fell on the acre that you are in.
No, a measurable function may have a finite number of discontinuities (for the Riemann measure), or a countably infinite number of discontinuities (for the Lebesgue measure). It should also be bounded (have some upper and lower bound, or limit, in the domain that is being measured), to be measureable. At least, some unbounded functions are not measurable.No, a measurable function may have a finite number of discontinuities (for the Riemann measure), or a countably infinite number of discontinuities (for the Lebesgue measure). It should also be bounded (have some upper and lower bound, or limit, in the domain that is being measured), to be measureable. At least, some unbounded functions are not measurable.No, a measurable function may have a finite number of discontinuities (for the Riemann measure), or a countably infinite number of discontinuities (for the Lebesgue measure). It should also be bounded (have some upper and lower bound, or limit, in the domain that is being measured), to be measureable. At least, some unbounded functions are not measurable.No, a measurable function may have a finite number of discontinuities (for the Riemann measure), or a countably infinite number of discontinuities (for the Lebesgue measure). It should also be bounded (have some upper and lower bound, or limit, in the domain that is being measured), to be measureable. At least, some unbounded functions are not measurable.
Quantitative is a description with a numerical measurement. For example: There is 12 mL of the solution. <-- You are describing how much of the solution there is with a numerical, measurable description. On the other hand, qualitative is a description of the features that is not measureable. For example: The solution is blue. <-- You are describing a feature of the solution.
This is the correct spelling for "measured" (size or volume determined)
Everything measureable has a unit it is measured in.
Concrete.
Behaviourism
Measureable.