a. [a. Fr. amissible, ad. L. āmissibil-em, f. āmiss- ppl. stem of āmitt-ĕre to lose.] Liable to be lost.
1672. Jacomb, Comm. Rom., viii. (1868), 59. The same grace now is not amissible as that was.
1777. Wesley, Wks., 1872, XI. 442. It [entire Sanctification] is amissible, capable of being lost.
1852. I. Taylor, Wesley & Method., 213. That release from guilty fears which the Gospel affords should be thought of as amissible.