Anglais modifier

Étymologie modifier

Du latin fungor (« accomplir un devoir ») avec le suffixe -ible (« capable de »).

Adjectif modifier

Nature Forme
Positif fungible
Comparatif more fungible
Superlatif most fungible

fungible \ˈfʌn.d͡ʒɪ.bəl\

  1. Fongible.
    • Gold is fungible. Silver is fungible; that is, these metals are both so homogeneous that, if I get a pound of pure gold, for example, it is indifferent to me whether it be this pound or that pound, one is as good as another. — (Samuel Dana Horton, Silver and Gold and Their Relation to the Problem of Resumption, 1876 [1877], p. 116).

Prononciation modifier

Références modifier