viable
viable — adjective
1. describing a plan, project, or business that is practical and realistic enough t
describing a plan, project, or business that is practical and realistic enough to achieve its goals and keep succeeding over time.
The board decided the new recycling plant was not economically viable and cancelled the project.
collocation: economically viable
Iris considered several business options before picking the most viable one.
Without additional funding, the start-up's plan to expand into Asia was no longer viable.
Joaquín's community garden proposal seemed viable after the city donated the land.
Ritu and her team found a viable solution to reduce waste in the factory.
- feasible
narrower focus on technical possibility; a plan can be feasible (doable) without being viable (able to last)
- workable
more informal; suggests a solution that is good enough to function, often with a pragmatic tone
- practical
broader; emphasizes real-world suitability rather than the capacity to keep succeeding
- unworkable
the opposite of a workable or practical plan
- unrealistic
suggests a plan that has no chance in practice, without the economic or sustainability nuance
文法句型
[be] + viable
viable + noun
viable + to-infinitive
用法筆記
Often paired with adverbs such as economically, commercially, financially, or politically to specify the area in which something is able to succeed.
常見錯誤
2. describing a living thing such as a cell, seed, embryo, or organism that is able
describing a living thing such as a cell, seed, embryo, or organism that is able to stay alive and develop in the normal way.
The doctor told Emma that the pregnancy was viable and the baby was growing well.
viable pregnancy — medical collocation
Farmers tested whether the seeds were still viable after two years in storage.
Only half of the embryos in the study were viable enough for implantation.
The biologist confirmed that the tissue sample was still viable under the microscope.
Adisa carefully placed the viable cells into a warm nutrient solution to help them grow.
- alive
broader; 'alive' simply means not dead, while 'viable' adds the sense of being able to grow and develop
- fertile
different meaning; 'fertile' describes the ability to reproduce, not the ability to survive and grow
- healthy
overlaps but is less precise; 'healthy' describes good condition overall, not specifically the capacity to develop independently
文法句型
[be] + viable
viable + noun
用法筆記
Common in medical and biology writing. Not usually used in the comparative form (more viable / most viable) in formal scientific literature, though the comparative does appear in informal or popular writing.