Obs. Also -ability. [In form from CULLIBLE (of which, however, early instances have not yet been found).] The quality of being cullible; gullibility.
1728. Swift, Lett. to Pope, 16 July. Providence never designed him to be above two and twenty, by his thoughtlessness and cullibility.
1768. Sterne, Sent. Journ., II. Case of Conscience. If there is not a fund of honest cullability in man so much the worse.
1807. Opie, Lect. Art, iii. (1848), 308. Innocent cullibility on one part, and brutality and cunning on the other.
1837. New Monthly Mag., XLIX. 7. The coal-mines of Great Britain may possibly be some day exhausted, but its cullability never.