Dócil in english

Docile

pronunciation: dɑsəl part of speech: adjective
In gestures
docile

dócil = meek ; docile ; malleable ; tame ; compliant ; acquiescent. 

Example: Male librarians believed the public's image of themselves to be more submissive, meek, nervous, effeminate, reserved, following, subdued and less approachable, athletic, and attractive than the undergraduate sample actually saw them.Example: Was she, too, destined to become as docile and obedient as the other staff members appeared to be?.Example: While manual catalogs are essentially preestablished indexes which a user must deal with as found, electronic databases are inherently flexible and malleable = While manual catalogs are essentially preestablished indexes which a user must deal with as found, electronic databases are inherently flexible and malleable.Example: Today, nudity, sex, and excessive violence are not an issue and even the raciest films would garner a PG-13 rating from the Motion Picture Association of America, and most are even tamer than that.Example: A compliant and motivated client will participate enthusiastically in a treatment, whereas the recalcitrant client will resist therapeutic interventions.Example: Now I look back and wonder why I put up with so much, why I was so acquiescent.

Dócil synonyms

meek in spanish: manso, pronunciation: mik adjectivegentle in spanish: amable, pronunciation: dʒentəl adjectivetame in spanish: domar, pronunciation: teɪm adjective, verbsheepish in spanish: vergonzoso, pronunciation: ʃipɪʃ adjectivetractable in spanish: manejable, pronunciation: træktəbəl adjectiveyielding in spanish: flexible, pronunciation: jildɪŋ noun, adjectivetamed in spanish: domesticado, pronunciation: teɪmd adjectiveteachable in spanish: educable, pronunciation: titʃəbəl adjectivesheeplike in spanish: sheeplike, pronunciation: ʃiplaɪk adjective
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