Enactable

/ɪˈnæktəbəl/ adjective

Definition

Capable of being enacted, performed, or put into law; feasible to implement as legislation or action.

Etymology

From enact (en- + act, from Latin actus 'done') plus the suffix -able (from Latin -abilis 'capable of'). A technical legal and political term.

Kelly Says

In law and politics, 'enactable' describes bills or policies that are practical enough to actually turn into law—some ideas sound good in theory but aren't enactable because they're too vague or technically impossible to implement!

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