From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishrealizablerea‧liz‧a‧ble (also realisable British English) /ˈrɪəlaɪzəbəl/ adjective 1 POSSIBLEpossible to achieve SYN achievable Is this a realizable goal?2 MONEYin a form that can be changed into money easily the company’s realizable assets
Examples from the Corpus
realizable• realizable goals• As it turned out, these ambitions proved only partly realizable in one retreat.• The link between urban form and transport was never clearer, but realizable solutions seemed as far away as ever.• Culture is derived as a historical force prior to the existence of any individual subject, but is only realizable through agency.• The answers using historic cost, replacement cost and net realizable value basis are as follows.• realizable value• Stocks purchased for resale and stocks at managed houses: at the lower of cost and net realizable value.• Why is it necessary to value stock at the lower of cost and net realizable value?• The attempt by residents to develop in their own eyes a post-industrial ethic was not realizable without consequences and contradictions.From Longman Business Dictionaryrealizablerea‧liz‧a‧ble /ˈrɪəlaɪzəbəl/ (also realisable British English) adjective realizable assets/investmentsFINANCE assets or investments that can be sold quickly to provide money that is neededIt had realizable assets of only $1.16 billion against liabilities of $10.64 billion. → see also net realizable value under value1