facility Meaning, Definition & Usage

  1. noun a building or place that provides a particular service or is used for a particular industry
    installation.
    • the assembly plant is an enormous facility
  2. noun skillful performance or ability without difficulty
    quickness; deftness; adeptness; adroitness.
    • his quick adeptness was a product of good design
    • he was famous for his facility as an archer
  3. noun a natural effortlessness
    readiness.
    • they conversed with great facility
    • a happy readiness of conversation"--Jane Austen
  4. noun something designed and created to serve a particular function and to afford a particular convenience or service
    • catering facilities
    • toilet facilities
    • educational facilities
  5. noun a service that an organization or a piece of equipment offers you
    • a cell phone with internet facility

WordNet


Fa*cil"i*ty noun
Etymology
L. facilitas, fr. facilis easy: cf. F. facilit. See Facile.
Wordforms
plural Facilities
Definitions
  1. The quality of being easily performed; freedom from difficulty; ease; as, the facility of an operation.
    The facility with which government has been overturned in France. Burke
    .
  2. Ease in performance; readiness proceeding from skill or use; dexterity; as, practice gives a wonderful facility in executing works of art.
  3. Easiness to be persuaded; readiness or compliance; -- usually in a bad sense; pliancy.
    It is a great error to take facility for good nature. L'Estrange.
  4. Easiness of access; complaisance; affability.
    Offers himself to the visits of a friend with facility. South.
  5. That which promotes the ease of any action or course of conduct; advantage; aid; assistance; -- usually in the plural; as, special facilities for study. Syn. -- Ease; expertness; readiness; dexterity; complaisance; condescension; affability. -- Facility, Expertness, Readiness. These words have in common the idea of performing any act with ease and promptitude. Facility supposes a natural or acquired power of dispatching a task with lightness and ease. Expertness is the kind of facility acquired by long practice. Readiness marks the promptitude with which anything is done. A merchant needs great facility in dispatching business; a bunker, great expertness in casting accounts; both need great readiness in passing from one employment to another. "The facility which we get of doing things by a custom of doing, makes them often pass in us without our notice." Locke. "The army was celebrated for the expertness and valor of the soldiers." "A readiness obey the known will of God is the surest means to enlighten the mind in respect to duty."

Webster 1913