robbable

That can be robbed; susceptible to robbery.

Adjective

  1. That can be robbed; susceptible to robbery.
    • ...and doubtless the robber barons had hard times to pick up a living, because the demand for robbable passers must have exceeded the supply. - 1904, Alfred Emanuel Smith, New Outlook:
    • All old men are robbable. He's an old man. He's robbable. - 1989, Robert Pinget, A Bizarre Will and Other Plays:
    • After all, we are all robbable, and it is the offender's decision to rob... - 1991, Diane Sank, David I Caplan, To Be a Victim: Encounters with Crime and Injustice:

Origin

Etymology tree English rob Proto-Indo-European *-dʰlom Proto-Indo-European *-dʰlis Proto-Italic *-ðlis Latin -bilis Latin -ābilis Old French -ablebor. Middle English -able English -able English robbable From rob + -able.

Forms

more robbable most robbable