Once upon a time there was a pretty pony AMICABLE.
He is an amicable, friendly fellow, always happy to communicate and share mutual interests, hobbies or sports. He is usually amicable even though circumstances might not be optimistic.
After arguing with Taylor we finally came to an amicable decision.
My parents are very amicable to me when they give me surprises. All interested parties agreed that the armistice was an amicable agreement. Not all of it is entirely amicable.
Bill and Shirley's divorce wasn't amicable, but they kept up appearances for the sake of the children.
Amicable is stressed on the first syllable.
The correct adjective is amicable.Amicable shows that the situation results in an good-willed agreement
Despite their differences, the two neighbors managed to maintain an amicable relationship.
There are no exact rhymes for the word amicable.
The prefix for "amicable" is "a-", which means "not" or "without."
'Amicable' is an adjective. 'Conciliation' is a noun. Amicable means 'friendly.' 'Conciliation' is "the act of makingfriendly."
Yes: the pair forms an adjective describing the succeeding noun. The sentence might read, say, "Delicate discussions between the senior management and union representatives led to an amicable solution of the dispute."
Amicable means friendly or agreeable.Examples:"She hung up the phone after a long and amicable conversation with her chief rival.""The two towns came to an amicable agreement over water rights.