a. [f. prec. + -ABLE.] That can be consigned.
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.
1808. Bentham, Sc. Reform, 18. Consignable to ruin, for non-compliance with a demand.
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.