Noun
recoverability (uncountable)
The property of being able to recover or be recovered.
I can be almost terminally grief-stricken because things are so dire, but at the same, there's a real lightheartednes s about just the recoverability of life, of how things change, how they're not the same, ever again. Alice Walker
DHFL mentioned in its results filing on Thursday it had provisioned Rs 2,392 crore as a prudent measure on the uncertainty of recoverability by the way of unsecured inter corporate deposits (ICDs). Source: Internet
He said LVB is facing an existential crisis and the secrecy clause for the banking industry will not apply now and it is a fit case to declare the details of NPA in public domain without which the recoverability of the loans cannot be understood. Source: Internet
Reduxio redefines data recoverability and storage efficiency for Oracle database environments. Source: Internet
Organizations that have established and actively embraced standard frameworks, like the Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL), are significantly improving their odds of recoverability in the chaotic atmosphere of a disaster situation. Source: Internet
It will go to those folks who insist on the technology they like instead of something solid that I can build better recoverability -- and give the users better systems, too. Source: Internet