groupable

groupable

(ˈɡruːpəbəl)
adj
able to be grouped
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References in periodicals archive ?
Approximately 50% of the strains isolated from carriers lack capsule and are therefore serologically not groupable. (32,33) In one of the studies on meningococcal carriage prevalence in Chile, 65% of isolated strains were non-groupable.
This would be congruent with the suggestion in literature that for children at the beginning stages of learning about place value it is important for materials to be proportional and groupable, that is, single units such as beans or small cubes that can be gathered into groups of ten (Van de Walle, Karp, Lovin and Bay-Williams, 2014; Young-Loveridge, 1999).
(164.) Posner notes that drug and immigration offenses are viewed as "paradigmatic" of "groupable" offenses (i.e., those offenses primarily affecting society at large).
Lights, cameras and 3D objects are managed as a tree of 'Scene Nodes', arbitrary groupable entities which are responsible for their own behaviour.
(%) B 10 (45.5) C 5 (22.7) Y 5 (22.7) W135 1 (4.5) Not groupable 1 (4.5) Table 2.
Are we finding out how groupable "pistol X" actually is--or how well the shooter's eyes are dealing with distance and glare and fatigue on a given day?
Non-groupable strains were genetically related to groupable isolates found in the population using genogrouping polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays as previously reported.
(12.) Nicholas WC, Steele CR Occurrence of groupable beta-hemolytic streptococci.