Susceptibility definition

Susceptibility means the degree to which an organism is affected by a pesticide at a particular level of exposure.
Susceptibility means the potential, as a result of the combination of land use activities and source water sensitivity, that contamination of the drinking water source may occur.¶
Susceptibility means the combined effect of vulnerability to contamination and the presence of potential contaminantsstate or fact of being likely to be influenced or harmed by a particular thing. In the CAO it is used with respect to contamination and geological hazards.

Examples of Susceptibility in a sentence

  • Induced Landslide and Liquefaction Susceptibility and Initiation Potential Maps for Tsunami Inundation Zones for the Long Beach Peninsula, Pacific County, Washington, for a 9+ Cascadia Subduction Zone Event.

  • M-11 magROCK Magnetic Susceptibility Meter (Stable & Rugged Field Instrument) $ 30 $ 30 $ 170 $ 500 1 day $ 2,750 2 kg.

  • Susceptibility to Cleanup or Abatement 1 0 Susceptibility to Cleanup: no For capacity-related SSOs, less than 50% of these SSOs was amenable to cleanup or containment because the collection system, storm drains, and creeks were also flowing full at the time.

  • Susceptibility to Cleanup: yes For blockage-related SSOs, greater than 50% of each was susceptible to cleanup as the Discharger response time was adequate (average of about 1 hour).

  • US 5,452,361 Issued September 19, 1995, entitled "Reduced VLF Overload Susceptibility Active Noise Cancellation Headset".

  • The suite of borehole logs includes: Natural Gamma, Spectral Gamma, Gamma-Gamma, Neutron, Full Waveform Sonic, Electrical Resistivity / Induction log, Spontaneous Potential, Single Point Resistance, 3-Arm Caliper, Fluid Resistivity and Temperature, High Accuracy Borehole Deviation, Acoustic and Optical Televiewers, Heat Pulse Flow Meter and Magnetic Susceptibility.

  • Susceptibility to Cleanup or Abatement 1 Less than 50 percent of each wet weather SSO was amenable to cleanup or containment because the discharges were quickly carried away by high creek flows to the ocean and the ocean current prevented cleanup or containment of untreated sewage.

  • Drug Susceptibility of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from 10 Provinces in China, Thank you to ▇▇.

  • Susceptibility to cleanup or abatement 1 None of the spill was recovered because the spill entered surface waters during a rain event.

  • MMFs’ Susceptibility to Runs In the twenty-seven years since the adoption of rule 2a–7, only two MMFs have broken the buck.


More Definitions of Susceptibility

Susceptibility means the potential for a PWS (as determined at the point immediately preceding treatment, or if no treatment is provided, at the entry point to the distribution system) to draw water contaminated above a demonstrated background water quality concentration through any overland or subsurface pathway. Such pathways may include cracks or fissures in or open areas of the surface water intake, and/or the wellhead, and/or the pipe/conveyance between the intake and the water distribution system or treatment.