a. Obs. [a. Fr. accompagnable f. accompagner + -ABLE.] Sociable, companionable.
1548. Geste, Preuee Masse, 135. Sequestering him selve from hys accompanable parrishioners.
1580. North, Plutarch (1676), 871. Cecinna was neither for person nor manners accompaniable for the people.
1580. Sidney, Arcadia (1622), 6. A shew, as it were, of an accompanable solitarinesse, and of a ciuill wildenes.
[Not in Cotgr. or Florio, 1611. The former has Fr. accompagnable, companable, sociable.]