a. [f. prec. + -ABLE.] That may be foreseen.
1804. W. Taylor, in Ann. Rev., II. 367/2. There are seasons of the year, states of the money-markets, which bring on a rise and a fall foreseeable by that sort of vague instinct, which habit of business may tend to form.
1840. Mill, Diss. & Disc., Bentham (1859), I. 387. The morality of an action depends on its foreseeable consequences; its beauty, and its loveableness, or the reverse, depend on the qualities which it is evidence of.