Obs. Also -ability. [In form from CULLIBLE (of which, however, early instances have not yet been found).] The quality of being cullible; gullibility.

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1728.  Swift, Lett. to Pope, 16 July. Providence never designed him to be above two and twenty, by his thoughtlessness and cullibility.

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1768.  Sterne, Sent. Journ., II. Case of Conscience. If there is not a fund of honest cullability in man so much the worse.

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1807.  Opie, Lect. Art, iii. (1848), 308. Innocent cullibility on one part, and brutality and cunning on the other.

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1837.  New Monthly Mag., XLIX. 7. The coal-mines of Great Britain may possibly be some day exhausted, but its cullability never.

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