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Showing results for fungible.
Definitions

fungible

[fuhn-juh-buhl] / ˈfʌn dʒə bəl /




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.

Borges expects Azure to drive revenue estimates higher in 2026 as it capitalizes on a “fungible” capacity, meaning that its data centers can be easily utilized for a variety of different workloads and customers.

From MarketWatch

The authors note that money is fungible, yet the source matters; windfalls get special treatment, and larger windfalls are treated differently than smaller ones.

From The Wall Street Journal

But that is a specious argument, because money is fungible.

From The Wall Street Journal

If attention is fungible, then Netflix’s share, and the merged firm’s share, would fall below the presumption established in the 1963 precedent.

From Barron's

By being “fungible,” Microsoft lays the groundwork to “ensure the build is for the broad customer base.”

From MarketWatch