English Language & Usage Asked on April 5, 2021
As in “it is possible to try it again”. “Tryable” seems to be the one mostly used online, if you type it in Google. Onelook Dictionary Search only returns an entry for “tryable” from Wordnik, not from any of the major online dictionaries.
Which spelling is the correct one for this meaning?
In Google Books search results for 1900–2008, retryable (blue line) and retriable (red line) are very similar in total number of matches:
Although retriable seems to have gained the upper hand since about 1995, its relatively strong showing in recent years may be due in large part to a house style preference in its favor at one publisher, Springer-Verlag, whose titles account for eight of the nine matches for retriable in the year 2006.
At this point, it's impossible to say that one spelling is correct and the other is incorrect—in fact, it's impossible to predict with any confidence which one will win out in the battle for dominant usage. However, the more frequent the usage becomes, the more pressure there will be on publishers (assuming that publishers in the traditional sense of the word continue to exist) to standardize on one spelling or the other. If the need to refer to something's ability to be retried continues to grow in computer terminology—and to hold steady in legal terminology—we should see some movement toward consensus on the spelling, one way or the other, in the next decade.
Correct answer by Sven Yargs on April 5, 2021
Retryable is the more correct spelling, triable in the sense of able to be tested, is rare.
Triable has a different meaning:
1) (Law)
- liable to be tried judicially
- subject to examination or determination by a court of law
2)
- (rare) able to be tested
(Collins)
Answered by user66974 on April 5, 2021
I notice that the Outlook spell checker accepts "triable" and "retriable" but not "tryable" or "retryable". (The spell checker for this page says they are all wrong.) Within computer terminology, that feels wrong. Imagine you are in a try/catch block. Something fails in the "try" section so you want to know if you can "retry" it in the catch block. You don't attempt to "retri" - you want to know if it is "retry"-able. I think this is similar to "indexes" versus "indices" - in computer terminology, an index is different enough from the more general term that "indexes" feels better IMHO.
Answered by Paul on April 5, 2021
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