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Definition of "revokable" []

  • Alternative spelling of revocable. (adjective)

Wiktionary.org : Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

Use "revokable" in a sentence
  • "As the wife of attorney James C. Fowler (a UCSB undergrad; UC Berkley J.D. circa 1968), a Mc Cain supporter and boat lover who owns a 43 foot yacht via some kind of revokable trust he established, and who is a partner with the prestigious firm Bingham & McClutchen, which list's Mehran's firm as a client on it's website, specializes in real estate law, does work in the energy sector, and who's clients also ocassionaly include people who buy military bases that have been closed, Mayhill Fowler inhabits that rarified air of the truly rich and truly elite."
  • "It may be a license to use that service freely, in whole or in part, but (with a caveat that I might be willing to admit of exceptions argued convincingly enough) that license should always be revokable by the creator, and until it is I see little reason to respect an inequitous privilege."
  • "If you generalize the problem of data tagging, a unified solution presents itself by jumping up and down and waving “hey, over here, look over here” … encrypted storage of data, decrypted on-the-fly with revokable access keys."