English edit

Etymology edit

bluff +‎ -able

Adjective edit

bluffable (comparative more bluffable, superlative most bluffable)

  1. Capable of being bluffed.
    • 1998, Donald Henry Owings, Eugene S. Morton, Animal vocal communication: a new approach:
      In other words, the assessment process handicaps management by limiting the evolution of bluffable signals.
    • 2006, Steven Lubet, Lawyers' poker: 52 lessons that lawyers can learn from card players:
      Imagine, for example, that you are dealt two unsuited low cards in Texas Hold'em, but you decide that the table is bluffable.