readable
suomi-englanti sanakirjareadable englannista suomeksi
luettava
readable englanniksi
Legible, possible to read or at least decipher.
(ux)
Which can be read—i.e. accessed or played—by a certain technical type of device.
Enjoyable to read, of an acceptable stylistic quality or at least functionally composed.
(quote-book) Carlyle|editors=Clyde de L(quote-gloss) Ryals; Kenneth J(quote-gloss) Fielding; et al.|title=The Collected Letters of Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle|edition=Duke-Edinburgh|volume=27 (1852)|location=Durham, N.C.|publisher=Duke University Press|year_published=1999|page=59|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/collectedletters0000carl_o4g6/page/59/mode/1up|isbn=0-8223-2410-5|passage=I have been twice at the Museum looking out for ''Friedrich'' Books,—that I might examine them a little, and see whether they were worth ''buying''. (..) I have got a rather curious new German Book upon Naples and ''Masaniello'' (chiefly) wh''h'' often made me remember you. To one who knows the streets edifices &c the thing may be readabler: I mean to send it you to Scotsbg the day after tomorrow, along with my Mother’s Magazine.
(quote-book) Gill and Company,(nb...)|page=ix|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/lotosleavesorigi00brourich/page/n16/mode/1up|oclc=32012106|passage=(smallcaps) will not fail to observe that those spiritual adumbrations are not evanescent or fugaceous, a latrocinous cheat, repugnant to common-sense and an insult to the most parvanimous of human intelligences, but tangible entities, altogether stationary, and as visible to every eye as the readablest of printed work.
(quote-journal) Bernard Shaw|title=Chestertonism and the War: A Review|journal=Statesman|The New Statesman: A Weekly Review of Politics and Literature|volume=IV|issue=94|location=London|page=386|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/sim_new-statesman_1915-01-23_3_94/page/386/mode/1up|column=2|issn=0028-6842|oclc=1590544|passage=With this brief preamble I can, without being more than usually misunderstood, proceed to my duty of reviewing the readablest and quite the maddest book produced by the war: namely, ''The Prussian Hath Said in His Heart'', by Cecil Chesterton, who says very truly that it is what a man says in his heart that matters, and not what he says in Hyde Park.
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