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.
c. 1565. Lindesay (Pitscottie), Chron. Scot. (1728), 115. No man can say, it is bot caiceable to ane man to fall in ane offence.
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.
1671. [R. MacWard], True Non-conf., 97. As is very casible.