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bookable

American  
[book-uh-buhl] / ˈbʊk ə bəl /

adjective

  1. able to be reserved, engaged, or scheduled in advance.

  2. Sports. being an offense or foul serious enough to draw a warning from a referee.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

At present, it will not intervene on yellow cards - so downgrading Kelly's initial dismissal for a second bookable offence was never VAR's intention.

From BBC

In Saturday's game, Mejbri was on the receiving end of the foul that earned Wesley Fofana his first yellow card, before the Chelsea defender was later sent off for a second bookable offence.

From BBC

The penthouse—bookable for $50,000 a night—is part of Four Seasons Yachts, a new luxury cruise line from Four Seasons Hotels & Resorts and Marc-Henry Cruise Holdings.

From The Wall Street Journal

The property is now no longer bookable on Hilton.com, and the hotel’s webpage has been taken down.

From The Wall Street Journal

The visitors played just over half the encounter a player down following captain Ronald Araujo's dismissal for two bookable offences on the stroke of half-time.

From Barron's