a. Obs. rare. [f. TRADUCE v. + -IBLE: cf. producible.] Capable of being ‘traduced’ or transmitted; transmissible.

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1658.  T. Blake, Vind. Foederis, xxxv. 277. Priviledges descendable, and traducible to posterity.

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1660.  Howell, Parly Beasts, 141. I remember another argument that was urged for the traducible generation of the human Soul, which was, that the Rationall Soul begins to operat in the prolificall seed the very first moment of conception, [etc.].

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a. 1676.  Hale, Hist. Com. Law, iV. (1713), 61. I mean Oral tradition, yet such a Tradition were incompetent without written Monuments to derive to us, at so long a Distance, the Original Laws, because they are of a complex Nature, and therefore not orally traducible to so great a Distance of Ages, [etc.].

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