We have no meanings for "too facile" in our records yet.
1 Unfortunately, fishers and seafaring men are too facile to be compared with!
2 It's both apparent, and too facile , to say that this is a story of alienation.
3 George Sand was another facile, all too facile , writer.
4 She laughed it off as a freak mental lapse, maybe in a little too facile a manner.
5 I find this conclusion too facile .
6 For whatever sentiment met him in form too facile , his lips menaced, beautifully but surely, caprice and light esteem.
7 This explains why Petra, Daniel, and Suzanne play well with Anthony, even when they find his arrangements too facile .
8 I do not say that Dickens' pathos is always of the too facile sort, which plays round children's death-beds.
9 But I wish you had asked me something in which obedience was not much too facile to be a test of duty.
10 To Mr. Dormer Colville they gave the upward lift of the chin as to a person too facile in speech to be desirable.
11 Many vile stories have been told of the Waldenses; calumny is far too facile a weapon not to tempt an adversary at bay.
12 They must neither be ruled by stubborn pride of opinion, nor be too facile and yielding to the views and arguments of others.
13 She did not desire him to be too facile a victim of cajolery; it would take from the interest she felt in his ambitions.
14 A true artist cannot but tire of a form that is too facile ; and he is ever yearning for a grapple with stubborn resistance.
15 Adam Gopnik's reputation precedes him -talented but perhaps a little too facile and pleased with himself, parading in the New Yorker his fabulous life.
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Too facile through the time