That last sentence is not sofacile as it at first seems.
2
That's not quite sofacile a question as it first appears.
3
She puzzled Bouchard, she was sofacile, so ready, so many-sided.
4
Let us not be sofacile as to say that principle ever rules in politics.
5
What need of letters, when interviews were sofacile?
6
Transition being sofacile, what can be any man's inducement to tarry in one spot?
7
And because he's sofacile and he's got great hair, he wins the day a lot.
8
But the thing is not easy, sofacile, so delicate, so almost imperceptible, are these sensations.
9
But my son is not sofacile.
10
While Philip spoke the Duke never took eyes from his face-thatface sofacile in the display of feeling or emotion.
11
Upon these sums Varney had lived very pleasantly, and he saw with a deep sigh the approaching failure of sofacile a resource.
12
On the contrary, nothing sofacile, pellucid, pleasant to read had appeared in modern literature- apoeticlubberland, a "clear, unwrinkled song."
13
Destruction was becoming sofacile that any little body of malcontents could use it; it was revolutionising the problems of police and internal rule.
14
It's sofacile to say what other countries should do, as so well put by Kevin Myers (An Irishman's Diary, April 3rd).
15
Never was speculation so rife, never was the field of human observation so unobstructed and expanded, nor the ascertainment and sifting of facts sofacile.