STABLE vs STABILE: NOUN
- A building or an inclosure in which horses, cattle, and other domestic animals are lodged, and which is furnished with stalls, troughs, racks, and bins to contain their food and necessary equipments; in a restricted sense, such a building for horses and cows only; in a still narrower and now the most usual sense, such a building for horses only.
- In racing slang, the horses belonging to a particular racing stable.
- A farm building for housing horses or other livestock
- A house, shed, or building, for beasts to lodge and feed in; esp., a building or apartment with stalls, for horses
- A building, wing or dependency set apart and adapted for lodging and feeding (and training) animals with hoofs, especially horses
- All the racehorses of a particular stable, i.e. belonging to a given owner.
- A common dipterous fly (Stomoxys calcitrans) which is abundant about stables and often enters dwellings, especially in autumn; called also biting house fly. These flies, unlike the common house flies, which they resemble, bite severely, and are troublesome to horses and cattle. They differ from the larger horse fly.
- A sculpture having fixed units (usually constructed of sheet metal) and attached to a fixed support
- An abstract sculpture, usually of sheet metal, resembling a mobile but having no moving parts.
- Abstract sculpture or structure of wire, sheet metal, etc.
STABLE vs STABILE: ADJECTIVE
- Steady in purpose; constant; firm in resolution; not easily diverted from a purpose; not fickle or wavering.
- Not taking part readily in chemical change
- Firmly established; not easily moved, shaken, or overthrown; fixed.
- So placed as to resist forces tending to cause motion; of such structure as to resist distortion or molecular or chemical disturbance; -- said of any body or substance.
- The kind of equilibrium of a body so placed that if disturbed it returns to its former position, as in the case when the center of gravity is below the point or axis of support; -- opposed to unstable equilibrium, in which the body if disturbed does not tend to return to its former position, but to move farther away from it, as in the case of a body supported at a point below the center of gravity. Cf. Neutral equilibrium, under Neutral.
- Relatively unchanging, permanent; firmly fixed or established, consistent, not easily to be moved, changed, unbalanced, destroyed or altered in value.
- Showing little if any change
- Maintaining equilibrium
- Resistant to change of position or condition
- Firm and dependable; subject to little fluctuation
- Durable; not subject to overthrow or change; firm
- (chemistry, physics, biology) resistant to change
- Not able or intended to be moved
- Immobile; unchangeable; stable.
STABLE vs STABILE: VERB
- Shelter in a stable
- To put or keep (horse) in a stable.
- To park (a rail vehicle)
- N/A
STABLE vs STABILE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To dwell or lodge in a stable; to dwell in an inclosed place; to kennel.
- N/A
STABLE vs STABILE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To put or keep in a stable.
- To fix; to establish.
- N/A
STABLE vs STABILE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To make steady, firm, or sure; support.
- To make stable; establish; ordain.
- To dwell or lodge in or as in a stable, as beasts.
- To put or keep in a stable, as horses.
- In physical, being in equilibrium such that no displacement, distortion, or molecular or chemical change can be produced without the expenditure of work: said of a body which, when displaced, tends to return to its former position, or, when distorted, to its former shape, also of a substance which resists molecular or chemical change.
- Durable, Permanent, etc. See lasting.
- Subject to little fluctuation
- Synonyms and
- Fixed or firm in resolution or purpose; not wavering, fickle, or easily diverted: as, a man of stable character; also formerly, in a bad sense, obstinate; pertinacious.
- Fixed; steady; constant; permanent.
- Firm; firmly fixed, settled, or established; that cannot be easily moved, shaken, or overthrown; steadfast: as, a stable structure; a stable government.
- To stand firm; be confirmed.
- To fix or hold fast, as in mire; mire; stall.
- Firm and dependable
- Fixed; firm: noting, in electrotherapeutics, an electrode which is kept applied to one part, as distinguished from a labile electrode, which is moved about over the surface.
STABLE vs STABILE: RELATED WORDS
- Stability, Unfluctuating, Horse barn, Firm, Stalls, Sound, Lasting, Unchangeable, Static, Unreactive, Unchanging, Balanced, Steady, Stabilized, Stabile
- Transcaucasia, Enescu, Dobrogea, Sustainable, Yttria, Stabilization, Stabulation, Equilibrium, Stability, Stationary, Immovable, Immoveable, Unmovable, Immobile, Stable
STABLE vs STABILE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Robust, Healthy, Stability, Unfluctuating, Firm, Sound, Lasting, Unchangeable, Static, Unreactive, Unchanging, Balanced, Steady, Stabilized, Stabile
- Transcaucasia, Enescu, Dobrogea, Sustainable, Yttria, Stabilization, Stabulation, Equilibrium, Stability, Stationary, Immovable, Immoveable, Unmovable, Immobile, Stable
STABLE vs STABILE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- This means, there may be other tags available for this package, such as next to indicate future releases, or stable to indicate stable releases.
- Stable expression requires the generation of stable cell lines in which the expression construct is integrated into the host genome.
- Some radionuclides become stable after a single emission of radiation, while some transform into various radionuclides as they disintegrate many times, until becoming stable.
- Train, show, and breed horses, Build your stable, Chat in our active community, and test your stable management skills.
- Under normal circumstances, an individual accurately perceives his or her voluntary movements and perceives the surroundings to be stable when they are actually stable.
- Gottman has discovered certain factors that distinguish happy, stable couples from both unstable, ultimately divorcing couples and stable but unhappy couples.
- In the terminology of evolutionary game theory, this stable mixture of individuals playing Steadfast and Concessive is an evolutionarily stable state.
- VPN routed is stable, my connection is clearly stable.
- All radionuclides eventually decay to stable nuclides, but some undergo a series of decays before they reach the stable nuclide.
- Stable is the key, this super stable vertical lifting table prevents any wobbling and tipping.
- Daniel Stabile: "The most important thing is to reform the offender.
- As part of the religious education program requirements, Stabile started taking her daughter to Sunday Mass.
- Those are values I found stabile and another successful builder by the name of Roebert used.
- Netze interessierten Diensteanbietern bereit stehen und den Nutzern stabile, symmetrische sowie zukunftssichere Bandbreiten bieten.
- Unlike Trump, these human shit stains are highly intelligent, disciplined and emotionally stabile.
- Stand is recent to hold the ship upright and stabile.
- Sekiya, JK, Haemmerle, MJ, Stabile, KJ, Vogrin, TM, Harner, CD.
- Fa la sua bella figura, elegante comodo e stabile.
- Michael Stabile, now awaiting review by the Town Council.
- Stabile A, Pesaresi MA, Stabile AM, et al.
STABLE vs STABILE: QUESTIONS
- Is octreotide acetate stable in polypropylene syringes?
- How stable are commercially available Mk7 products?
- Can epigenetic modifications generate new stable phenotypes?
- Is pasteurized milk shelf stable without refrigeration?
- What is the latest stable stable version of the MTA mod?
- What is an example of stable marriage in a stable marriage?
- Can a system be both asymptotically stable and marginally stable?
- What is the latest stable version of stable XZ Utils?
- What makes a relationship more stable or less stable?
- Are stable cell lines necessary for stable gene expression?
- Was ist der Unterschied zwischen einem stabile und einem instabilen arbeitpunkt?
- Was ist der Unterschied zwischen emotional labile und emotional stabile?