sanabilis
Ἐχθροῖς ἀπιστῶν οὔποτ' ἂν πάθοις βλάβην → Minus dolebis, quo hostibus credes minus → Dem Feind misstrauend bleibst von Schaden du verschont
Latin > English
sanabilis sanabilis, sanabile ADJ :: curable
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
sānābĭlis: e, adj. sano,
I that can be healed, curable, remediable (rare but class.); of the body: vulnus, Ov. P. 2, 2, 59; id. R. Am. 101: dolor sanabilior, Cels. 2, 8; of the mind, * Cic. Tusc. 4, 37, 80; Sen. Ep. 108, 3. —Sup. and adv. do not occur.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
sānābĭlis,¹³ e (sano), guérissable : Cic. Tusc. 4, 80 || salutaire : Aug. Serm. 18, 5 || sanabilior Sen. Ep. 108, 4.
Latin > German (Georges)
sānābilis, e (sano), 1) heilbar, a) physisch: vulnus, Ov.: res nullis medicamentis sanabilis (v. Brustkrebs), Ambros.: dolor sanabilior, Cels.: Ggstz. plaga mihi sanabilis, illi pestifera, Cic. – b) geistig, iracundi sanabiles, Cic.: qui ad philosophum venit, aut sanior domum redeat aut sanabilior, Sen. – II) heilsam, ista paenitentia cruciabilis non sanabilis, Augustin. serm. 18, 5: erit sanabilius ergo, ut etc., Cael. Aur. de morb. chron. 4, 8, 123.
Latin > Chinese
sanabilis, e. adj. c. :: 可醫者
Translations
curable
Bulgarian: излечим; Catalan: guarible, curable; Czech: vyléčitelný; Finnish: parannettavissa oleva, hoidettavissa oleva, kovettuva; French: curable; German: heilbar; Ancient Greek: ἰάσιμος, ἰατός, ἀκέσμιος, ἀκεστός; Hungarian: gyógyítható; Italian: curabile; Latin: sanabilis; Manx: so-lheihys; Norwegian Bokmål: helbredelig; Portuguese: curável; Spanish: curable; Swedish: botbar; Turkish: tedavi edilebilir