a. [f. prec. + -ABLE.] That can be consigned.

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1681.  Stair, Instit., IV. xlii. § 9 (1693), 688. The offer to pay or perform any obligation in due time, and the Consignation of what is consignable, upon refusal, are probative.

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1808.  Bentham, Sc. Reform, 18. Consignable to ruin, for non-compliance with a demand.

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1850.  Morn. Chron., 5 Aug., 5/5. To whichever of these two classes [religious impostors and maniacs] Joseph Smith is most properly consignable, it is certain that his doctrine [Mormonism] was no sooner preached than he began to make converts of the people around him.

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