facilities









facilities


noun, plural fa·cil·i·ties.

  1. Often facilities.
    1. something designed, built, installed, etc., to serve a specific function affording a convenience or service: transportation facilities; educational facilities; a new research facility.
    2. something that permits the easier performance of an action, course of conduct, etc.: to provide someone with every facility for accomplishing a task; to lack facilities for handling bulk mail.
  2. readiness or ease due to skill, aptitude, or practice; dexterity: to compose with great facility.
  3. ready compliance: Her facility in organizing and directing made her an excellent supervisor.
  4. an easy-flowing manner: facility of style.
  5. the quality of being easily or conveniently done or performed.
  6. Often facilities. Informal. a rest room, especially one for use by the public, as in a theater or restaurant.
  7. freedom from difficulty, controversy, misunderstanding, etc.: facility of understanding.

noun plural -ties

  1. ease of action or performance; freedom from difficulty
  2. ready skill or ease deriving from practice or familiarity
  3. (often plural) the means or equipment facilitating the performance of an action
  4. rare easy-going disposition
  5. military an organization or building offering supporting capability
  6. (usually plural) a euphemistic word for lavatory
n.

“opportunities,” 1809, plural of facility. Sense of “physical means of doing something” is from 1872.

n.

early 15c., “gentleness,” from Middle French facilité, from Latin facilitatem (nominative facilitas) “easiness, ease, fluency, willingness,” from facilis “easy” (see facile). Its sense in English moved from “genteelness” to “opportunity” (1510s), to “aptitude, ease” (1530s). Meaning “place for doing something,” which makes the word so beloved of journalists and fuzzy writers, first recorded 1872.

54 queries 0.405