English

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Etymology

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From depend +‎ -ible.

Adjective

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dependible (comparative more dependible, superlative most dependible)

  1. Archaic spelling of dependable.
    • 1862, William Jackson Hooker, Species Filicum: Scolopendrium, page 212:
      [] though I believe the most dependible marks to be derived from the long-attenuated base of the frond, owing to the gradual dwarfing of the lower pinnæ; []
    • 1875, Charles Greville, The Greville Memoirs, page 215:
      [] still there is scarcely a hope of their gaining enough to enable Peel to carry on the Government with such constant and dependible majorities as can alone render it efficacious and secure.
    • 1883, Report on the Administration of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and the Penal Settlements of Port Blair and the Nicobars, for the Year 1882–1883, page 69:
      I have found him during the whole of my own residence here (since 1872) the most steady and sober of men, always at his work, and a thoroughly dependible man in every way.
    • 1926, Musical Merchandise Combined for the Duration [with] The Music Trade Review, page 33:
      Furthermore, Rexcraft, Inc., is starting 1927, with a complete net work of dependible jobbers from Coast to Coast.
    • 1966, Fleishour V. United States of America, page 39:
      He is average in work, dependible in attitude, is always in the middle of all the kiddish pranks the other inmate's[sic] want to play.