capable of being removed or taken away or dismissed
<adj.all> a removable cord removable partitions
able to be obliterated completely
<adj.all>
Removable \Re*mov"a*ble\ (r?-m??v"?-b'l), a. Admitting of being removed. --Ayliffe. -- {Re*mov`a*bil"i*ty} (-?-b?l"?-t?), n.
In 1980, doctors first used the insertable catheter tubes with removable caps.
The removable disk systems sold by Tandy and Leading Edge are made by Roy, Utah-based Iomega Corp.
Yet he is neither elected by the people nor removable by any representative body. That will also be true of his Chinese-appointed successor in 1997.
On that ground, judges are removable only on an Address by both Houses of Parliament. This measure did not of itself create an independent judiciary.
Popular items include baggy pants with insertable knee pads and seven roomy pockets for tools ($39), as well as plastic clogs with removable rubber insoles ($34 a pair).
Indeed, the removable top leaked and the car's engine was sluggish.
Previously, Cadillac offered Allante only as a soft-top/hard-top: a convertible with a removable aluminum roof.
On its state maps, for example, Raven's cartographic team uses film with a removable emulsion, peeling away the surface coating between each set of contour lines and adding a band of color.