English edit

Etymology edit

cast +‎ -able

Adjective edit

castable (comparative more castable, superlative most castable)

  1. Able to be cast. In particular:
    1. Capable of or suitable for being assigned a role in a play, film, etc.
      • 2009 October 13, Susie Essman, What Would Susie Say?: Bullsh*t Wisdom About Love, Life and Comedy, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN:
        I always assumed that I'd be more castable as I got older. I'm a character actress and a comedian —not some pretty little ingénue. I figured I'd grow []
      • 2020 February 24, Harlan Post, Rolling the Dice: Everything You Want to Know About Becoming a Hollywood Actor, Archway Publishing, →ISBN:
        Most importantly, agents want to know you are castable. The easiest way to show them that, obviously, is to get cast in stuff. You might have a long and impressive resume from your acting school or community theater back home []
    2. Capable of being performed and brought forth (as a spell or magic).
      • 1972, William Joseph Whalen, Minority Religions in America:
        page=144 Witches Spellbook is advertised [as] "For those who'd like to be witches and get their hands on a batch of castable spells." This book also includes a shopping guide for such necessities as bottled bat's blood.
      • 2021 December 26, Azalea Ellis, A Binding of Blood: A Gaslamp University Hard Fantasy, Seladore Publishing:
        Magic tomes [] provided access to more castable spells than would fit in most artifacts, up to two or three dozen. The military offered its soldiers a few portable arrays made of precious metals wrought into the desired shapes, but those would be even less accessible []
    3. (engineering) Capable of being cast, as in a mould.
    4. (programming) Capable of being cast to another data type.

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

Translations edit

Noun edit

castable (plural castables)

  1. (engineering) Any substance that can be cast, as in a mould.

Translations edit