sinnable

Adjective

 * 1)  Able to sin.
 * 2) * No year, circa 1835, Stephen Jarvis, An American's Experience in the British Army, manuscript reprinted in The Journal of American History 1, no. 3 (1907), page 443:
 * I represented to my father that I was very sinable [sic], that I had done wrong in espousing a cause so repugnant to his feelings, and contrary to my own opinion also.
 * 1) * 1864,, A Manual of Religious Instruction (translated from the French original, Manuel d'Instruction Religieuse, 1863; translator unknown), Simpkin, Marshall, and Co., page 204:
 * All the elements of sin are found in the narrative :—1, innocence ; 2, a known law accompanied with a clear prohibition ; 3, a sinnable nature ; 4, an object desirable to that nature ; 5, the activity of the temptation under a veiled and so not repulsive form ; 6, yielding to the seduction ; 7, conscious guilt ; 8, fear and flight ; 9, detection ; 10, exposure and condemnation.
 * All the elements of sin are found in the narrative :—1, innocence ; 2, a known law accompanied with a clear prohibition ; 3, a sinnable nature ; 4, an object desirable to that nature ; 5, the activity of the temptation under a veiled and so not repulsive form ; 6, yielding to the seduction ; 7, conscious guilt ; 8, fear and flight ; 9, detection ; 10, exposure and condemnation.

Antonyms

 * unsinnable