a. Sc. Obs. Also 6 caiceable, 7 casible. [f. CASE sb.1 + -ABLE. Cf. chanceable.] Able or liable to happen, possible; natural in the case.

1

c. 1565.  Lindesay (Pitscottie), Chron. Scot. (1728), 115. No man can say, it is bot caiceable to ane man to fall in ane offence.

2

a. 1662.  R. Baillie, Lett. (1775), I. 185 (Jam.). Of this symptom, very caseable, more din was made by our people than I could have wished.

3

1671.  [R. MacWard], True Non-conf., 97. As is very casible.

4