admittable

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admittable
admittable, a. (ædˈmɪtəb(ə)l) Also 5–7 admittible. [f. prec. + -able. The earlier admittible follows the analogy of credible, etc., repr. L. forms in -ibilis; but admittibilis is not found, and the late L. was admissibilis. See admissible and -ble.] Formerly = admissible, but now limited more closel... Oxford English Dictionary
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admittible
admittible variant form of admittable. Oxford English Dictionary
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What is the adjective for admit? - WordHippo
Adjectives for admit include admissable, admissible, admissive, admissory, admittable, admittible, admitted and admitting. Find more words at wordhippo.com!
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École secondaire Grande-Rivière
While there is an admittable difference in grading between the "internationals" and other students, this is often explained on the basis that those who wikipedia.org
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permittable
† perˈmittable, -ible, a. Obs. [f. permit v. + -able, -ible: cf. admittable, committable.] = permissible.1574 Hellowes Gueuara's Fam. Ep. (1577) 355 It is not permittible for any man to bee iudge of himselfe. 1753 Scots Mag. Mar. 116/1 Neutral [ships] upon which the Prussians had laden permittable m... Oxford English Dictionary
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ZIS-5 (truck)
Wheelbase: Transmission: 4x2 speed without synchronizers Weight: (unloaded) Maximal speed: (from early 1950s - ) Tyres: 34x7 or 9,00x20 (post-war) inches, admittable wikipedia.org
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transmittable
transmittable, a. rare. (trɑːnsˈmɪtəb(ə)l, træns-, -nz-) Also less correctly -ible. [f. as prec. + -able; cf. admittable.] That may be transmitted; transmissible. In quot. 1655, ? capable of being ‘thrown’ across.1611 Cotgrave, Transmissible, Transmittable. 1655 Marquis of Worcester Cent. Inv. §73 A... Oxford English Dictionary
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committable
committable, -ible, a. (kəˈmɪtəb(ə)l) [f. commit + -able; cf. F. commettable: see -ble, and admittable.] That may be committed.1646 Sir T. Browne Pseud. Ep. iv. xii. 219 Mistakes committible in the solary compute of yeares. 1664 H. More Myst. Iniq. iv. 10 Most hainous sins committable against Christ... Oxford English Dictionary
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admissible
admissible, a. (ædˈmɪsɪb(ə)l) [a. Fr. admissible, ad. late L. admissibilem, f. admiss- ppl. stem of admitt-ĕre: see admit and -ble.] 1. Worthy of being entertained as an idea or project; allowable.1611 Cotgr., Admissible [Fr.]. admittable, admissible, fit to be admitted, received, allowed of. 1677 H... Oxford English Dictionary
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-ble
-ble a. OF. -ble:—L. -bilem, nom. -bili-s, suffix forming verbal adjs., with the sense ‘given to, tending to, like to, fit to, able to’; as in sta-bili- ‘like, fit to stand.’ After consonant stems, -ibili-, as vend-i-bili-, vinc-i-bili-; after stems ending in a, e, i, o, u, -ābili-, -ēbili-, -ībili-... Oxford English Dictionary
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odd
▪ I. odd, a. (n.) and adv. (ɒd) Forms: 4–6 ode, 4–7 odde, od, (4 hod, 5 Sc. oyd), 5– odd. [ME. odde, a. ON. odda- in comb. in odda-maðr (acc. odda-mann) third man, odd man, who gives the casting vote, odda-tala odd number, in which odda- is genitive or comb. form of oddi ‘point, angle, triangle’, wh... Oxford English Dictionary
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