traceableness

Variant of trace

trace definition

trace (trās)

noun

  1. Obsolete a way followed or path taken
  2. a mark, footprint, etc. left by the passage of a person, animal, or thing
  3. ☆ a beaten path or trail left by the repeated passage of persons, vehicles, etc.
  4. any perceptible mark left by a past person, thing, or event; sign; evidence; vestige the traces of war
  5. a barely perceptible amount; very small quantity a trace of anger
  6. something drawn or traced, as a mark, sketch, etc.
  7. the traced record of a recording instrument
    1. the visible line or spot that moves across the face of a cathode-ray tube
    2. the path followed by this line or spot
  8. Chem. a very small amount, usually one quantitatively immeasurable
  9. Math.
    1. the intersection of a line or of a projecting plane of the line with the coordinate plane
    2. the sum of the elements on the main diagonal of a matrix
  10. Meteorol. precipitation amounting to less than 0.127 mm (0.005 in)
  11. Psychol. engram

Etymology: ME < OFr < tracier < VL *tractiare < L tractus, a drawing along, track < pp. of trahere, to draw

transitive verb traced, tracing trac′·ing

  1. Now Rare to move along, follow, or traverse (a path, route, etc.)
  2. to follow the trail or footprints of; track
    1. to follow the development, process, or history of, esp. by proceeding from the latest to the earliest evidence, etc.
    2. to determine (a source, date, etc.) by this procedure
  3. to discover or ascertain by investigating traces or vestiges of (something prehistoric, etc.)
  4. to draw, sketch, outline, etc.
  5. to ornament with tracery: used chiefly in the past participle
  6. to copy (a drawing, etc.) by following its lines on a superimposed transparent sheet
  7. to form (letters, etc.) carefully or laboriously
  8. to make or copy with a tracer
  9. to record by means of a curved, broken, or wavy line, as in a seismograph

Etymology: ME tracen < OFr tracier: see tracethe

intransitive verb

  1. to follow a path, route, development, etc.; make one's way
  2. to go back or date back (to something past)

Related Forms:

Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2009 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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