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adj

variable

VEH-uh-ree-uh-bl
adj
1
Likely to change, or capable of being changed.
"Mountain weather is famously variable, shifting from sun to snow in an hour."
"The interest rate on the loan is variable, not fixed."
noun
1
A factor or quantity that can change or take different values.
"Diet is just one variable that affects long-term health."
"In the experiment, temperature was the only variable they changed."
2
In programming, a named storage location that holds a value which can change while a program runs.
"The script stores the user's name in a variable called `username`."

How to Use Variable

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishSomething variable can change, and a variable (the noun) is a thing — a factor, a quantity, or a piece of stored data — that is allowed to change.

Common pairings
variable rate variable weather independent variable declare a variable

Word Forms

more variable comparative, variables plural, most variable superlative

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Mountain weather is famously _____, shifting from sun to snow in an hour.

Etymology

From Old French variable, from Latin variare, "to change," based on varius, "different, varied."

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial