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    docile
    /ˈdəʊsʌɪl/

    adjective

    • 1. ready to accept control or instruction; submissive: "a cheap and docile workforce"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

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  3. Docile means quiet and easy to influence, persuade, or control. Learn more about the word, its synonyms, and how to use it in sentences from the Cambridge Dictionary.

  4. Docile means quiet, not aggressive, and easily controlled. It can also mean ready to learn or teachable. See synonyms, pronunciation, examples, and word origin of docile.

  5. Docile means easily taught, led, or managed. It comes from Latin docēre, meaning "to teach". See synonyms, examples, word history, and related words.

  6. Docile definition: easily managed or handled; tractable. See examples of DOCILE used in a sentence.

  7. Docile means quiet and easy to control. Learn how to use this adjective with pictures, pronunciation, collocations and synonyms from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary.

  8. Docile means apt to be taught, ready and willing to receive instruction, or yielding readily to treatment. It comes from Latin docilis, meaning teachable or tractable. See the historical and current usage of docile in sentences and quotations.

  9. If you behave well and do what people tell you to do, you're a docile person. Docile might be a word of praise, but it can also be a criticism of someone for being overly submissive. Some synonyms are amenable and compliant .

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