solicitous in English

adjective
1
characterized by or showing interest or concern.
she was always solicitous about the welfare of her students

Use "solicitous" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "solicitous" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "solicitous", or refer to the context using the word "solicitous" in the English Dictionary.

1. Assiduities, devoted or solicitous attentions.

2. They were solicitous to please.

3. I am solicitous of his help.

4. She was very solicitous for our welfare.

5. Garnished, commission, prevarication, absolution, solicitous, sanguine, Avouches

6. They were solicitous for their son's health.

7. My silences made him solicitous of me.

8. He dashed about her, solicitous but irascible.

9. He was so solicitous of his guests.

10. They were very solicitous and attentive to detail.

11. 15 She was very solicitous for our welfare.

12. Beware, she means ill , despite her solicitous manner.

13. He was very solicitous for her safe return.

14. Does it hurt, sir? His voice was flatly solicitous.

15. Our hero was very solicitous about his descendants.

16. He made a solicitous enquiry after her health.

17. I was still by nature solicitous to be neat.

18. The scrutiny he bent on her was most solicitous.

19. As the months wore on Miss Glover became dreadfully solicitous.

20. He is Attentive, even solicitous, and Theresa accepts a dinner date

21. To be particularly attentive or solicitous; minister: The nurses Catered

22. Fayed was solicitous, seeing him three or four times a week.

23. The egg meets a less solicitous fate in the other two paintings.

24. We can see the soft expression in their eyes, caring and solicitous, watchful.

25. Larry spoke to Davis in sympathetic and solicitous tones during the interview.

26. With every need taken care of by attentive and solicitous flight staff.

27. 16 synonyms for Athirst: agog, ardent, avid, bursting, eager, impatient, keen, solicitous, thirsting

28. She is so solicitous and persistent that she virtually kills you with kindness.

29. He was solicitous about lighting her cigarette and inquiring as to her comfort.

30. To be particularly attentive or solicitous; minister: The nurses Catered to my every need

31. English words for Avide include eager, greedy, avid, hungry, grasping, rapacious, predatory, voracious, acquisitive and solicitous

32. The boys were solicitous of each other's confidence: the quick were sensitive with the slow.

33. Garnished, commission, prevarication, absolution, solicitous, sanguine, Avouches Absolution In confession the penitent man received ______________ for his sins

34. They had spent a pleasant evening, and James had been most solicitous when he took his leave.

35. Admonishing definition is - serving to admonish : expressing warning or disapproval in usually an earnest or solicitous way

36. The door was locked but the Lady Eleanor could trust Dame Agatha, who was ever solicitous for her happiness.

37. So the piece was solicitous in trying to alleviate the shocks by explaining that the novelist himself was shocked.

38. You would have had them back long after shrugging them off for ever: strong but submissive, insensitive, while abrasively solicitous.

39. Adjective thoughtful, kind, kindly, concerned, obliging, attentive, mindful, unselfish, solicitous I think he's the most charming, Considerate man I've ever met

40. Anxi- (Latin: Anxius , solicitous, uneasy, troubled in mind) angst (German equivalent of Anxiety ) (s) ( noun ) (normally used only in the singular in English)

41. 27 Her eyes wide and solicitous and framed by jet-black lashes I made thick and long by trimming the ends every few months.

42. Anxious definition, full of mental distress or uneasiness because of fear of danger or misfortune; greatly worried; solicitous: Her parents were Anxious about her poor health

43. Anxious (adj.) 1620s, "greatly troubled by uncertainties," from Latin anxius "solicitous, uneasy, troubled in mind" (also "causing anxiety, troublesome"), from angere, anguere "to choke, squeeze," figuratively "to torment, cause distress" (from PIE root *angh-"tight, painfully constricted, painful")