(of a crime) rendering the offender liable to extradition
an extraditable offence
2.
(of a person) subject to extradition
extraditable in American English
(ˈɛkstrəˌdaɪtəbəl)
adjective
1.
that can be extradited
2.
making liable to extradition
extraditable in American English
(ˈekstrəˌdaitəbəl, ˌekstrəˈdai-)
adjective
1.
capable of being extradited; subject to extradition
an extraditable person
2.
capable of incurring extradition
an extraditable offense
Word origin
[1880–85; extradite + -able]This word is first recorded in the period 1880–85. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: impressionism, interface, jackpot, rain check, regionalism-able is a suffix meaning “capable of, susceptible of, fit for, tending to, given to,”associated in meaning with the word able, occurring in loanwords from Latin (laudable); used in English as a highly productive suffix to form adjectives by addition tostems of any origin (teachable; photographable)
Examples of 'extraditable' in a sentence
extraditable
Espionage was not an extraditable offence.
Times, Sunday Times (2017)
So does cartel activity amount to a criminal offence under common law, so as to justify its being extraditable?