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Facility   /fəsˈɪlɪti/   Listen
noun
Facility  n.  (pl. facilities)  
1.
The quality of being easily performed; freedom from difficulty; ease; as, the facility of an operation. "The facility with which government has been overturned in France."
2.
Ease in performance; readiness proceeding from skill or use; dexterity; as, practice gives a wonderful facility in executing works of art.
3.
Easiness to be persuaded; readiness or compliance; usually in a bad sense; pliancy. "It is a great error to take facility for good nature."
4.
Easiness of access; complaisance; affability. "Offers himself to the visits of a friend with facility."
5.
That which promotes the ease of any action or course of conduct; advantage; aid; assistance; usually in the plural; as, special facilities for study.
Synonyms: Ease; expertness; readiness; dexterity; complaisance; condescension; affability. Facility, Expertness, Readiness. These words have in common the idea of performing any act with ease and promptitude. Facility supposes a natural or acquired power of dispatching a task with lightness and ease. Expertness is the kind of facility acquired by long practice. Readiness marks the promptitude with which anything is done. A merchant needs great facility in dispatching business; a banker, great expertness in casting accounts; both need great readiness in passing from one employment to another. "The facility which we get of doing things by a custom of doing, makes them often pass in us without our notice." "The army was celebrated for the expertness and valor of the soldiers." "A readiness to obey the known will of God is the surest means to enlighten the mind in respect to duty."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Facility" Quotes from Famous Books



... for the principals. The lacrimose stoop-to-folly-and-wring-his-bosom Mme. de Tourvel is merely a bore; the ingenue Cecile de Volanges is, as Mme. de Merteuil says, a petite imbecile throughout, and becomes no better than she should be with the facility of a predestined strumpet; her lover, Valmont's rival, and Mme. de Merteuil's plaything, M. le Chevalier Danceny, is not so very much better than he should be, and nearly as much an imbecile in the masculine way as Cecile in the feminine; her respectable mother and Valmont's respectable ...
— A History of the French Novel, Vol. 1 - From the Beginning to 1800 • George Saintsbury

... effecting some notable cures in the earliest cases submitted to me, and it is everything in the career of a physician when good luck wins betimes for him that confidence which patients rarely accord except to lengthened experience. To the rapid facility with which my way was made, some circumstances apart from professional skill probably contributed. I was saved from the suspicion of a medical adventurer by the accidents of birth and fortune. I belonged to an ancient family (a branch of the ...
— A Strange Story, Complete • Edward Bulwer-Lytton

... was allied to the nobility, she formed a strong friendship, which continued through life. For many years she kept up a constant correspondence with this friend, and to this correspondence she attributes, in a great degree, that facility in writing which contributed so much to her subsequent celebrity. This letter-writing is one of the best schools of composition, and the parent who is emulous of the improvement of his children in that respect, will do all in his ...
— Madame Roland, Makers of History • John S. C. Abbott

... nearer I could hear that the bishop spoke French fluently, but with a strong foreign accent. This facility, however, enabled him to converse with ease on every subject, and to hold intercourse directly with our general, a matter of no small moment to either party. It is probable that the other clergy did not possess this gift, for assuredly their manner toward us, inferiors of the staff, was neither ...
— Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 2, No. 8, January, 1851 • Various

... different from the art of Gertler than that of Duncan Grant. For him it seems impossible to scrabble a line or wipe his brush on a bit of paper without giving delight. As the saying goes, he is all over an artist. Men endowed with this prodigious sensibility, facility, and sense of beauty are not uncommon in England. In my time there have been four—Conder, Steer, John, and Duncan Grant. The danger is, of course, that they will fall into a trick of flicking off bits of empty prettiness to the huge contentment of a public that cannot bear artists to develop ...
— Pot-Boilers • Clive Bell


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