Amicable comes from Latin amīcābilis, meaning "friendly," and amāre, "to feel affection for" or "to love." Amāre has a number of English descendants, including amiable ("friendly, sociable, and congenial"), amorous ("strongly moved by love and especially sexual love"), and amateur, which, though it might seem surprising, is related to amāre by way of the Latin amātor, which means "lover" as well as "enthusiastic admirer" and "devotee."
amicable implies a state of peace and a desire on the part of the parties not to quarrel.
maintained amicable relations
neighborly implies a disposition to live on good terms with others and to be helpful on principle.
neighborly concern
friendly stresses cordiality and often warmth or intimacy of personal relations.
sought friendly advice
Examples of amicable in a Sentence
About a million couples divorce each year in the United States, and most, like my ex and me, start out striving to keep the split amicable. And though you may have good intentions, things can go awry during the traditional I-win-you-lose adversarial process.—Annie Finnigan, Family Circle, 17 Oct. 2008Instead, with the help of a neighborhood activist, Rob struck out in another direction. He retook his old turf from the dealers who had replaced him and opened a fruit stand and, later, a hot-dog concession. Bright, amicable and assured, Rob so impressed Anderson that the sociologist hired him as a part-time assistant.—Ellis Cose, Newsweek, 30 Aug. 1999Cops such as William Anderson and Lowell Powell had been Sonny's friends. "I was a policeman and he was something of a thug," Powell recalled, but nonetheless their dealings were amicable. In the big picture, however, there was no love lost between Sonny and the cops.—Nick Tosches, Vanity Fair, February 1998
They reached an amicable agreement.
the contract negotiations between the hotel workers and management were reasonably amicable
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The latest tariff threat, however, comes at a time when one of the world’s typically most fruitful and amicable bilateral relationships is getting iced over due to conflicting personalities at the top and a philosophical difference of how international politics should work.—Daniel Depetris, Chicago Tribune, 27 Jan. 2026 However, a family friend told PEOPLE that the former couple, who divorced in 1996 but remained amicable after, supported their daughters joining the royals on Christmas.—Janine Henni, PEOPLE, 27 Jan. 2026 But somewhere along the amicable journey toward a more independent Greenland actively involved in its own defense and security, a warming world with its increasingly accessible Arctic resources and declining sea ice caught the attention of nearly all world powers, great and small.—Barry Scott Zellen, Hartford Courant, 22 Jan. 2026 Both sides characterized the gathering as amicable.—Sean Gregory, Time, 22 Jan. 2026 See All Example Sentences for amicable
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, borrowed from Late Latin amīcābilis "friendly" — more at amiable