extricable
UK: /ɪkˈstrɪkəb(ə)l/ | US: /ɪkˈstrɪkəb(ə)l/
adj. capable of being disentangled or freed from difficulty or complication
The word "extricable" derives from Latin extricare, combining ex- (out) and tricae (perplexities, hindrances). The root tric evolved from Latin tricari (to shuffle, evade), metaphorically representing entanglement. The suffix -able (from Latin -abilis) denotes capability. Thus, "extricable" literally means "capable of being untangled from complications."
The knot was surprisingly extricable with patience.
Their legal dispute proved less extricable than anticipated.
She found herself in an extricable mess of conflicting obligations.
The solution was simple once the extricable parts were identified.
His argument was logically extricable from the broader debate.