fungible Meaning & Definition

  • En [ ˈfʌn.dʒ.ə.bəl]
  • Us [ ˈfʌn.dʒ.ə.bəl]

Meaning of fungible In English

More Definitions of fungible

Examples of fungible

  • The identity justification will count against the use of this power with respect to identity-constitutive property, though not with regard to fungible property.

  • She has failed to treat an appropriate fraction of her fungible property as a public trust and to use it to benefit others.

  • Here the substantial protection of the identity interest is not likely to be available, since such properties will characteristically be fungible.

  • Both of these factors are relevant: the loss is great, and, because the property interest is not fungible, money cannot properly make up for it.

  • If this goal is legitimate at all, the recognition of nonfungibility suggests, it provides far less reason for the compulsory purchase of nonfungible property than for that of fungible property.

  • Like currency, that other newly important way of thinking about value, time as fungible unit of commerce, provided the necessary abstraction to make sense of market exchange.

  • Brand recognition no longer requires individual practitioner recognition and opens the door for the fungible doctor.

  • I use the term 'media' mainly to refer to two-dimensional, fungible and superimposable inscriptions such as text, plans, maps, illustrations and so on.

More Examples of fungible

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