0 the fact of being able to be reached or obtained easily: --
The quality and accessibility of materials have to be high if there are to be no barriers to learning.
The accessibility of her plays means that she is able to reach a wide audience.
The theater offers full wheelchair accessibility.
Two new roads are being built to increase accessibility to the town centre.
1 the quality or characteristic of something that makes it possible to approach, enter, or use it: --
Accessibility is one of the most important aspects of textual analysis.
Touch-screen voting machines meet the requirements for accessibility to people with disabilities.
3 the ability to reach or enter a place or building: --
The new offices provide better accessibility for wheelchairs.
4 the fact of a person being willing to see people and of being friendly and easy to talk to: --
He is known for his accessibility and personal involvement in the day-to-day running of the business.
Medieval prisoners were marginalized, but they avoided social liminality (a major present-day risk) largely thanks to their visibility, accessibility, and frequent interaction with free society.
It is a recurrent theme of cultural interpretation of landscapes that accessibility is played off against visibility.
The increased visibility of the qualitative tradition seems likely to improve accessibility, so its use should be encouraged.
These developments also improve the accessibility of hunting areas and the efficiency of hunting.
Parttime hunters are more vulnerable to changes in the animal numbers and accessibility, particularly seal.
Furthermore, he evaluates products which enhance the liquidity or accessibility of funds placed into a variable annuity.
Since expansive geodesic flows of compact surfaces have no conjugate points, the accessibility property holds for every two-dimensional expansive geodesic flow.
Inspired by contact geometry, we look for non-commuting elementary paths if we want to show the accessibility of an open neighborhood from a point.