[f. next: see -ITY.] The quality of being exhaustible; capability of being exhausted.

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1836.  Fraser’s Mag., XIII. 349. His extractive power was such, that it never admitted the exhaustibility of a subject.

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1872.  W. S. Symonds, Rec. Rocks, x. 367. The question of the exhaustibility of our coal-fields is highly complicated.

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1884.  Syd. Soc. Lex., Exhaustibility, Benedict’s term for the condition where the electro-muscular contractility diminishes greatly after a short application.

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1889.  Courtney, Mill, i. 25. The possible exhaustibility of musical combinations.

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