facile

[ fas-il or, esp. British, -ahyl ]
/ ˈfæs ɪl or, esp. British, -aɪl /

adjective

moving, acting, working, proceeding, etc., with ease, sometimes with superficiality: facile fingers; a facile mind.
easily done, performed, used, etc.: a facile victory; a facile method.
easy or unconstrained, as manners or persons.
affable, agreeable, or complaisant; easily influenced: a facile temperament; facile people.

Origin of facile

1475–85; < Latin facilis that can be done, easy, equivalent to fac(ere) to do, make + -ilis -ile

OTHER WORDS FROM facile

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH facile

facile facilitate facility felicitate

Definition for facile (2 of 2)

facile princeps
[ fah-ki-le pring-keps; English fas-uh-lee prin-seps ]
/ ˈfɑ kɪˌlɛ ˈprɪŋ kɛps; English ˈfæs ə li ˈprɪn sɛps /

Latin.

easily the first or best.

Example sentences from the Web for facile

British Dictionary definitions for facile (1 of 2)

facile
/ (ˈfæsaɪl) /

adjective

easy to perform or achieve
working or moving easily or smoothly
without depth; superficial a facile solution
archaic relaxed in manner; easygoing

Derived forms of facile

facilely, adverb facileness, noun

Word Origin for facile

C15: from Latin facilis easy, from facere to do

British Dictionary definitions for facile (2 of 2)

facile princeps
/ Latin (ˈfæsɪlɪ ˈprɪnsɛps) /

noun

an obvious leader

Word Origin for facile princeps

literally: easily first