facile
[ˈfæs.ɫ̩]
UK: /ˈfæs.aɪl/
FÆS · ɫ̩ (2 syllables)
English
Adj
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Definition
Easy; contemptibly easy.
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle French facile, from Latin facilis (“easy to do, easy, doable”), from Latin facere (“to do, make”), from Proto-Indo-European *dʰeh₁- (“to do, put”) Compare Spanish fácil (“easy”). First use appears c. 1484 in a translation by William Caxton.
Example Sentences
- "[…] as he that is benummed with cold, sits still shaking, that might relieve himselfe with a little exercise or stirring, doe they complaine, but will not use the facile and ready meanes to doe themselves good; […]"
- "His facile disposition made him many friends."
- "Her writing was facile and articulate."
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