1 possible to approach, enter, or use: --
By using more illustrations, he made the magazine more accessible to the public (= easier to understand).
Public areas and buildings are now more accessible to people with disabilities.
3 able to be reached or entered: --
Our building is wheelchair accessible.
The studios are fully accessible to people with disabilities.
4 easy to understand: --
The material is accessible and does not require specialist knowledge.
5 if a person is accessible, they are willing to see people and are friendly and easy to talk to: --
Second, the presentation here, although more accessible, will be marginally less elegant than it might otherwise have been.
It presents the results of scholarly work in an accessible form, while at the same time responding to current events.
Approached by both elite and non-elite members of society, muft-s were quite accessible scholars.
It is extremely helpful to have these debates in an accessible modern edition.
In such uses, definite nominal gerunds draw on accessible knowledge on the part of the speaker for the identification of the event they refer to.
More marginally, definite nominal gerunds can also be used to specify a (typically undesirable) result, which is then presented as an accessible fact.
An oral tradition can and will adapt from one generation to the next, repeating its content in a form more readily accessible to the hearers.
First, it is unclear what the empirical significance0import is of the mathematical analysis of the data regarding the accessible information in the light.