Countable vs Measureable - What's the difference?
countable | measureable |
Capable of being counted; having a quantity.
(mathematics, of a set) Countably infinite; having a bijection with the natural numbers.
(mathematics, of a set) Countably infinite or finite; having a bijection with a subset of the natural numbers.
(grammar, of a noun) Freely usable with the indefinite article and with numbers, and therefore having a plural form.
* {{quote-news, year=2009, date=May 25, author=David Carr, title=As TV Dwindles, It Still Leads, work=New York Times
, passage=Think network television is washed up, overwhelmed by targeted and measureable ads on the Web?}}
As adjectives the difference between countable and measureable
is that countable is capable of being counted; having a quantity while measureable is .countable
English
Adjective
(-)Synonyms
* (having a bijection with a subset of the natural numbers) denumerableAntonyms
* uncountableHyponyms
* (having a bijection with a subset of the natural numbers) finite, countably infiniteHypernyms
* (countably infinite) infiniteDerived terms
* countable set * countable additivitySee also
* mass noun * plurale tantummeasureable
English
Adjective
(head)citation
