Many available cards have no annual fee, which makes your card's fee negotiable.
From the buffalonews.com
While airlines are required to reimburse for clothing, the amount is negotiable.
From the thenewstribune.com
Certification should be a non-negotiable condition for the city's participation.
From the kentucky.com
Control the vault, ATM machine and all negotiable instruments within the Branch.
From the jobview.monster.com
The company says that its closure is non-negotiable, and talks have broken down.
From the guardian.co.uk
Usually, it is negotiable with your adviser and varies from zero to 5 per cent.
From the dailytelegraph.com.au
Prices frequently are negotiable in electronics, jewelry and department stores.
From the delawareonline.com
The turf soaked up all of the hard rain and made the footing fairly negotiable.
From the newsday.com
Strip away the mistrust, and the issues separating the two sides look negotiable.
From the economist.com
More examples
Capable of being passed or negotiated; "a negotiable road"
Able to be negotiated or arranged by compromise; "negotiable demands"; "the proposal is still on the table"
Assignable: legally transferable to the ownership of another; "negotiable bonds"
Something that is open to negotiation; Able to be traversed; Able to be transferred to another person, with or without endorsement; Open to negotiation or bargaining
(negotiability) The state of being negotiable - used especially of a financial instrument
Capable of transfer by endorsement in the ordinary course of business.
A promissory note, or similar instrument, is said to be negotiable if title to the instrument, and the money it represents, can be transferred by mere endorsement and delivery by the holder, or by delivery only.
That species of property which can be transferred by endorsement and delivery.
Refers to a security, the title to which is transferable by delivery.