Is there a word in the english dictionary that means "usually visible"?
@wallhackio Can't think of any right now... But what exactly would you mean with "usually visible"? Can you give me an example of a thing that's usually visible?
@vaporeon_ it would better to say "usually identifiable" or "usually locatable"
let's say, to describe an picture of a face taken for facial recognition software. the software will very likely correctly identify somebody from a clear image of their face, but not always
@wallhackio is there a reason you can’t just use “usually visible”?
@Satsuma I am trying to invent taxonomy so a snappy name is better
@wallhackio this is why the taxonimists use fake latin so no one can tell when they’re failing at being snappy
@Satsuma I could just hack a word using quasi. Or I learned that the word "fere" in latin means closely/quite. So I could use ferevisible, ferelocatable, fereidentifiable
@wallhackio @Satsuma In a taxonomy, it seems to be pretty classic to assert that a property exists, and to justify decisions by saying that something is typically a property, even if not always. So you could just go with "visible", and even if something isn't always visible, you'd still put it on the visible side because it is visible more often than not.
@ferret what are those words?
@vaporeon_ I know you speak other languages, is there a word in some language you know of that has this meaning?