abstractable,a.|æbˈstræktəb(ə)l|Also -ible.[f.abstract v. + -able.]Capable of being abstracted, in the senses of the verb.1893W. James inMind II. 509There must be some things whose resemblance is not based on such discernible and abstractable identity.
1943A. M. FarrerFinite & Infinite viii. 94The only common properly abstractible form is that of mere numerability.
1958D. J. Furley in A. D. Booth et al.Aspects ofTransl.64A poem has meaning in very many different ways..some may be abstractable only at the cost of others.