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sorbile

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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From Latin sorbilis, from sorbere (to suck in, to drink down).

Adjective

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sorbile (comparative more sorbile, superlative most sorbile)

  1. (obsolete) Fit to be drunk or sipped.
    • 1784, Paul Henry Maty, A New Review: Volume 6, page 439:
      [] he rejects, also, Lavoisier's hypothesis, who supposes that metallic substances calcined, contain dephlogisticated air; whereas, according to Mr. Lubbock, they contain only the basis of dephlogisticated air, that is the sorbile principle.
    • 1835, Adam Waldie, The select circulating library: Volume 5, Part 1, page 190:
      By dint, however, of some puzzling, and cross-examination of the garçon, I discovered that la soupe is school French, and that the proper appellation of sorbile esculents is potage.

References

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Anagrams

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