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Origin and history of transmissible

transmissible(adj.)

"capable of being transmitted," in any sense, 1640s (in reference to inheritance of royal power), from Latin transmiss-, stem of transmittere "send across, carry over" (see transmit) + -ible. A parallel formation is transmittible (1610s), which might be built directly from the Latin verb or based on transmit (v.). Related: Transmissibility.

Entries linking to transmissible

"send over, onward, or along; cause to pass or go to another person or place," c. 1400, transmitten, from Latin transmittere "send across, cause to go across, transfer, pass on," from trans "across, beyond" (see trans-) + mittere "to release, let go; send, throw" (see mission). Figuratively, "convey, communicate to another" (1620s). Related: Transmitted; transmitting.

The obsolete alternative verb transmiss, transmise (Middle English transmisen) is from transmis-, the past-participle stem of the equivalent Old French verb.

1650s, from in- (1) "not, opposite of" + transmissible. Related: Intransmissibly; intransmissibility.

word-forming element making adjectives from verbs, borrowed in Middle English from Old French -ible and directly from Latin adjective suffix -ibilis (properly -bilis); see -able.

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