a. Obs. [a. Fr. accompagnable f. accompagner + -ABLE.] Sociable, companionable.

1

1548.  Geste, Preuee Masse, 135. Sequestering him selve from hys accompanable parrishioners.

2

1580.  North, Plutarch (1676), 871. Cecinna was neither for person nor manners accompaniable for the people.

3

1580.  Sidney, Arcadia (1622), 6. A shew, as it were, of an accompanable solitarinesse, and of a ciuill wildenes.

4

[Not in Cotgr. or Florio, 1611. The former has Fr. accompagnable, companable, sociable.]

5