An actionable claim is a claim that can be enforced by legal action or a claim that gives the holder the right to take legal action if it is not fulfilled. It must be specific, definite, and must not be vague or uncertain in nature. Examples include claims related to breach of contract, debt recovery, or property rights.
It would be more effective to say actionable in civil court.
He did some actionable things in college which made the teacher angry. It is one word to represent adjective of a verb.
An actionable insight is a piece of information that enables an individual (or group) to make an informed decision. Actionable insights are typically derived by synthesizing vast amounts of data into succinct, concise statements.
Appointment employed
rapport passible de poursuites
Measurable Substantial Accessible Differentiable Actionable
Effective segments are measurable, accessible, substantial, and actionable
Actual abuse is actionable; the fact that you happened to see a cross/Christmas tree/church/Bible/whatever is not.
the torts that the plaintiff does not need to prove actual damage
For a representation to be actionable: 1) It must be a false statement of fact or law (not a mere puff, statement of opinion or statement of intention) from the misrepresentor 2) The misrepresentee must have placed reliance on the misrepresentation 3) It is the misrepresentation that induced him into the contract
Words can have different meanings in different contexts. Each industry has its own "jargon," in a way. Since you haven't provided a context, I can only answer in a general sense. So: No, those words aren't opposites. "Actionable" means something you can do something with (e.g. information you can use as evidence in a lawsuit), and "substitute" means a replacement for an original (e.g. a substitute teacher for when the regular teacher is sick). The opposite of "substitute" could be "original" or "regular." The opposite of "actionable" could be "useless."