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evitabilis

Evitabilis is a Latin adjective meaning able to be avoided or avoidable. It derives from the verb evitare, to avoid, combined with the productive suffix -bilis, which forms adjectives indicating possibility or capability. The neuter form, evitabile, is used when the word modifies a neuter noun or is used substantively.

In classical Latin, evitabilis serves as a descriptive label for actions, events, or outcomes that can be

In modern usage, evitabilis is sometimes referenced in discussions of ethics, philosophy of action, or legal

See also: avoidable harm, evitability, Latin grammar, Latin vocabulary, inevitability.

prevented
or
foreaged.
It
commonly
appears
in
moral,
legal,
or
political
contexts
where
authors
discuss
prevention,
responsibility,
or
the
feasibility
of
avoiding
certain
harms
or
mistakes.
The
term
functions
as
a
normal
part
of
Latin
vocabulary
rather
than
as
a
specialized
technical
term,
and
it
can
be
used
with
a
range
of
nouns,
as
in
res
evitabilis
(an
avoidable
thing)
or
actus
evitabilis
(an
avoidable
act).
theory
to
distinguish
between
outcomes
that
are
avoidable
and
those
that
are
not.
While
not
a
widely
used
technical
term
in
contemporary
jargon,
it
appears
in
translations,
commentaries,
and
academic
writing
that
engage
with
Latin
vocabulary
or
with
the
conceptual
distinction
between
preventable
and
unavoidable
consequences.
The
concept
aligns
with
the
broader
idea
of
evitability,
the
degree
to
which
a
harm
or
result
can
be
foreseen
and
prevented.