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Amiability   /ˌeɪmiəbˈɪləti/   Listen
Amiability

noun
1.
A cheerful and agreeable mood.  Synonyms: good humor, good humour, good temper.  Antonym: ill humor.
2.
A disposition to be friendly and approachable (easy to talk to).  Synonyms: affability, affableness, amiableness, bonhomie, geniality.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Amiability" Quotes from Famous Books



... destroying the trees and bushes that crown it. What person who has known it and has often sought that spot for the sake of its ancient associations, and of the sweet solace they have found in the solitude, or for the noble view of the sacred city from its summit, will not deplore this fatal amiability of the authorities, this weak desire to please every one and inability to say no ...
— A Shepherd's Life • W. H. Hudson

... her, "looked more like a goddess than a woman." Her student life has been marked by seriousness and deep religious feeling. She is a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Buffalo. She was deeply loved by her teachers, more for her solidity of character and amiability of disposition than for exceptionally brilliant intellectual traits, though her average of scholarship ...
— The Truth About America • Edward Money

... sisters or wives. No man who is engaged in the serious work of the world, in the effort to purify public opinion and direct it aright, but is helped or hindered by the women of his household. Few men can stand the depressing and degrading influence of the uninterested and placid amiability of women incapable of the true public spirit, incapable of a generous or noble aim—whose whole sphere of ideas is petty and personal. It is not only that such women do nothing themselves—they slowly asphyxiate their friends, their brothers, or their husbands. These are the unawakened ...
— Three Addresses to Girls at School • James Maurice Wilson

... duets, and Vixen produced her small stock of vocal music. They tried one or two of Mendelssohn's, "I would that my love," and "Greeting," and discovered that they got on wonderfully well together. Vixen fell asleep that night wondering at her own amiability. ...
— Vixen, Volume II. • M. E. Braddon

... madame?" said Adrienne, with a smile. "You may now at least speak frankly all that you feel, which must for you have the charm of novelty! Confess that you are obliged to me for enabling you, even for a moment, to lay aside that mask of piety, amiability, and goodness, which must be ...
— The Wandering Jew, Complete • Eugene Sue


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