From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishseparablesep‧a‧ra‧ble /ˈsepərəbəl/ adjectiveSEPARATEtwo things that are separable can be separated or considered separatelyOPP inseparableseparable from
Physical health is not always easily separable from mental health.Examples from the Corpusseparable• Thus far Plato and Aristotleattributesimilarstatements to the Orphics: body and soul are separable.• Rather, they acknowledge two distinct and separablecodes.• When seen in the context of the Lincoln glass this is a thirdseparable compositional group of Pain de Venise glass.• But what if form is not separable from content?• The culture of a people is not separable from its physicalsurroundings.• Other species seem to be separable into geographical races based on their morphological features.• Inputs must be binary only, or linearly separable, or orthogonal.• He will recognize that there are large separablestrategic subsystems.