placable

Etymology
From placabilis.

Adjective

 * 1) Able to be easily pacified; quick to forgive.
 * 2) * 1577, (translator), The Auncient Ecclesiasticall Histories of the First Six Hundred Yeares after Christ, London, The Seventh Booke of the Ecclesiasticall Historye of  Bishop of Caesarea in Palaestina, Chapter17,
 * after that the deuine and celestiall grace of God behelde vs with a placable and mercifull countenance, then our princes, euen they which heretofore warred against vs, after a wonderfull manner chaunged their opinion
 * 1) Peaceable; quiet.
 * 2) * 1799,, “Mejnoun and Leila, the Arabian Petrarch and Laura,” Part3 in Romances, London: Cadell and Davies et al., p.115,
 * I care not for the honour of my friends, and am placable to the insult of an enemy. What is a man, alike incapable of friendship or of enmity?
 * 1)  Having the effect of pacifying, appeasing or pleasing.
 * 1) * 1799,, “Mejnoun and Leila, the Arabian Petrarch and Laura,” Part3 in Romances, London: Cadell and Davies et al., p.115,
 * I care not for the honour of my friends, and am placable to the insult of an enemy. What is a man, alike incapable of friendship or of enmity?
 * 1)  Having the effect of pacifying, appeasing or pleasing.
 * 1)  Having the effect of pacifying, appeasing or pleasing.
 * 1)  Having the effect of pacifying, appeasing or pleasing.
 * 1)  Having the effect of pacifying, appeasing or pleasing.