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- Dictionarydocile/ˈdəʊsʌɪl/
adjective
- 1. ready to accept control or instruction; submissive: "a cheap and docile workforce"
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quiet and easy to influence, persuade, or control: The once docile population has finally risen up against the ruthless regime. Synonyms. accommodating. acquiescent formal. amenable. complaisant formal. compliant formal. malleable. obedient. pliant (PERSON) SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Calm and relaxed. (as) cool as a cucumber idiom
1. : easily taught. a docile pupil. 2. : easily led or managed : tractable. a docile pony. docilely. ˈdä-sə (l)-lē. adverb. docility. dä-ˈsi-lə-tē. dō- noun. Did you know? Ready to learn the origin of docile? Docile students have always made teaching easier than it otherwise would be.
A person or animal that is docile is quiet, not aggressive, and easily controlled.
quiet and easy to influence, persuade, or control: The once docile population has finally risen up against the ruthless regime. Synonyms. accommodating. acquiescent formal. amenable. complaisant formal. compliant formal. malleable. obedient. pliant (PERSON) SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Calm and relaxed. (as) cool as a cucumber idiom
Docile comes from Latin root for teaching, docere, so someone docile is easy to teach. A docile student is willing to be taught. A docile animal is easy to handle. If you behave well and do what people tell you to do, you're a docile person.
Docile definition: easily managed or handled; tractable. See examples of DOCILE used in a sentence.
Definition of docile adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.