expugnabilis
Expugnabilis is a Latin adjective meaning "able to be taken by assault" or "conquerable." It derives from the verb expugno, expugnare, "to seize by force," with the suffix -bilis indicating capability. The neuter form is expugnabile; the masculine and feminine forms are expugnabiles, with standard endings for adjectives of the first/second declension. In translation, the term is often rendered as "expugnable" or "capable of being captured."
In classical and medieval Latin, expugnabilis describes fortifications, towns, or positions that could be captured by
Usage notes: expugnabilis emphasizes potential vulnerability rather than the execution of capture. It appears in descriptive
Modern relevance is primarily linguistic and historical. The related noun expugnatio and the broader concept of
See also: expugnatio, siege, fortress, siege warfare, conquest.