The Collaborative International Dictionary
Transmutable \Trans*mut"a*ble\, a. [Cf. F. transmutable. See Transmute.] Capable of being transmuted or changed into a different substance, or into into something of a different form a nature; transformable.
The fluids and solids of an animal body are easily
transmutable into one another.
--Arbuthnot.
[1913 Webster] -- Trans*mut"a*ble*ness, n. --
Trans*mut"a*bly, adv.
Wiktionary
a. able to be transmuted
WordNet
adj. capable of being changed in substance as if by alchemy; "is lead really transmutable into gold?"; "ideas translatable into reality" [syn: convertible, transformable, translatable]
Usage examples of "transmutable".
Magic, the reduction of properties to simplicity, making them transmutable to utilise them afresh by direction, without capitalization, bearing fruit many times.
As if in an economics class I had been ushered over into a column of transmutable commodities: the Murdered.
Still, something taken out of Anchor into Flux should be transmutable, just as something made in Flux and brought in is fixed.