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complaisant

adjective

com·​plai·​sant kəm-ˈplā-sᵊnt How to pronounce complaisant (audio)
-zᵊnt;
ˌkäm-plā-ˈzant,
-plə-,
-ˈzänt
1
: marked by an inclination to please or oblige
2
: tending to consent to others' wishes
complaisantly adverb

Did you know?

Complaisant or Complacent?

The homophones complaisant and complacent are often confused - and no wonder. Not only do they look and sound alike, but they also both derive ultimately from Latin complacēre, meaning "to please greatly." Complacent usually means "self-satisfied" or "unconcerned," but it also shares with complaisant the sense of "marked by an inclination to please or oblige." This sense of complacent is an old one, but that hasn't kept language critics from labeling it as an error - and on the whole, modern writers do prefer complaisant for this meaning. Conversely, complaisant is sometimes mistakenly used in contexts such as "complaisant about injustices," where complacent, with its sense of "marked by self-satisfaction especially when accompanied by unawareness of actual dangers or deficiencies," should go. One aid is to remember that with the preposition "about," you probably want complacent.

Choose the Right Synonym for complaisant

amiable, good-natured, obliging, complaisant mean having the desire or disposition to please.

amiable implies having qualities that make one liked and easy to deal with.

an amiable teacher not easily annoyed

good-natured implies cheerfulness or helpfulness and sometimes a willingness to be imposed upon.

a good-natured girl who was always willing to pitch in

obliging stresses a friendly readiness to be helpful.

our obliging innkeeper found us a bigger room

complaisant often implies passivity or a yielding to others because of weakness.

was too complaisant to protest a decision he thought unfair

Example Sentences

Recent Examples on the Web His admirers included such luminaries as U.S. Sen. Robert Wagner, all of whom turned a complaisant eye to the married Crater’s other life as a randy stage-door johnny with a mistress and a harem of chorus girls and Polly Adler hookers. Edward Kosner, WSJ, 20 June 2022 Administrations since have learned not to be so complaisant. WSJ, 20 May 2022 Abe, who hosted Trump in Tokyo a month ago and has been as complaisant as any world leader in courting the unpredictable U.S. president, has little to show for his efforts. Tracy Wilkinson, latimes.com, 26 June 2019 Chief executives of the territory have become steadily more complaisant to China’s wishes, say critics. Gerard Baker, WSJ, 21 June 2019 Greedy club owners and complaisant sportswriters contrived a persona for him as a mash-up of Li’l Abner and Paul Bunyan, a devoted family man and humble Hall of Famer. Edward Kosner, WSJ, 12 Apr. 2018 Onstage, there was absolutely nothing complaisant about her. Jon Pareles, New York Times, 18 Mar. 2018 See More

Word History

Etymology

French, from Middle French, from present participle of complaire to gratify, acquiesce, from Latin complacēre

First Known Use

1638, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of complaisant was in 1638

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