permissible
adj/pɚˈmɪsɪbl̩/US/pəˈmɪsɪbl̩/UK
Etymology
From Middle English permyssyble, from Old French permissible, from Medieval Latin permissibilis.
- derived from permissibilis
- derived from permissible
- inherited from permyssyble
Definitions
permitted.
- The units will be allowed to run up to 90 m.p.h. between Chelmsford and Colchester, but their maximum speed of 100 m.p.h. is not permissible on the G.E. line.
permissive
- As regards the incorporation of anglicisms and despite the efforts of the Real Academia Española (an official regulatory body which aims at the purity of the language), Spanish has usually been considered a rather permissible language.
- Japanese zoning is specified at a national level, and while local governments do have some control over their local developments, the end result is a zoning code that is very permissible compared to most other countries.
The neighborhood
- synonymabideable
- synonymacceptable
- synonymadmissible
- synonymallowable
- synonympermissible
- synonymsufferable
- synonymsupportable
- synonymtolerable
- antonymimpermissible
- antonyminacceptable
- antonyminsufferable
- antonyminsupportable
- antonymintolerable
- antonymnonacceptable
- antonymnonadmissible
- antonymnonallowable
- antonymnonpermissible
- antonymnontolerable
- antonymobjectionable
- antonymunabideable
- neighborpermissibly
- neighborpermission
- neighborpermit
- neighborlawful
- neighborvalid
- neighborhalal
- neighborkosher
- neighbornonharam
- neighborqingzhen
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for permissible. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA