Word Meanings - SOOTHE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
1. To assent to as true. Testament of Love. 2. To assent to; to comply with; to gratify; to humor by compliance; to please with blandishments or soft words; to flatter. Good, my lord, soothe him, let him take the fellow. Shak. I've tried the
Additional info about word: SOOTHE
1. To assent to as true. Testament of Love. 2. To assent to; to comply with; to gratify; to humor by compliance; to please with blandishments or soft words; to flatter. Good, my lord, soothe him, let him take the fellow. Shak. I've tried the force of every reason on him, Soothed and caressed, been angry, soothed again. Addison. 3. To assuage; to mollify; to calm; to comfort; as, to soothe a crying child; to soothe one's sorrows. Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast, To soften rocks, or bend a knotted oak. Congreve. Though the sound of Fame May for a moment soothe, it can not slake The fever of vain longing. Byron. Syn. -- To soften; assuage; allay; compose; mollify; tranquilize; pacify; mitigate.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of SOOTHE)
- Allay
- soothe
- alleviate
- repress
- mitigate
- quiet
- moderate
- appease
- compose
- soften
- pacify
- mollify
- assuage
- tranquilize
- palliate
- culm
- Alleviate
- Lighten
- lessen
- relieve
- remit
- diminish
- Calm
- Smooth
- allay
- still
- Compose
- Construct
- compile
- calm
- put together
- constitute
- draw up
- frame
- form
- settle
- adjust
- write
- Console
- Relieve
- solace
- encourage
- comfort
Possible antonyms: (opposite words of SOOTHE)
Related words: (words related to SOOTHE)
- STILLY
Still; quiet; calm. The stilly hour when storms are gone. Moore. - SMOOTHEN
To make smooth. - DIMINISH
To make smaller by a half step; to make less than minor; as, a diminished seventh. 4. To take away; to subtract. Neither shall ye diminish aught from it. Deut. iv. 2. Diminished column, one whose upper diameter is less than the lower. - COMFORTLESS
Without comfort or comforts; in want or distress; cheerless. Comfortless through turanny or might. Spenser. Syn. -- Forlorn; desolate; cheerless; inconsolable; disconsolate; wretched; miserable. -- Com"fort*less*ly, adv. -- Com"fort*less*ness, n. - ROUSE
To pull or haul strongly and all together, as upon a rope, without the assistance of mechanical appliances. - SMOOTHNESS
Quality or state of being smooth. - STILLBIRTH
The birth of a dead fetus. - AGITATE
1. To move with a violent, irregular action; as, the wind agitates the sea; to agitate water in a vessel. "Winds . . . agitate the air." Cowper. 2. To move or actuate. Thomson. 3. To stir up; to disturb or excite; to perturb; as, he was greatly - CONSTRUCT
together, to construct; con- + struere to pile up, set in order. See 1. To put together the constituent parts of in their proper place and order; to build; to form; to make; as, to construct an edlifice. 2. To devise; to invent; to set in order; - ENCOURAGER
One who encourages, incites, or helps forward; a favorer. The pope is . . . a great encourager of arts. Addison. - ADJUSTIVE
Tending to adjust. - COMFORTABLY
In a comfortable or comforting manner. Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem. Is. xl. 2. - REPRESSIBLE
Capable of being repressed. - DIMINISHER
One who, or that which, diminishes anything. Clerke . - LESSENER
One who, or that which, lessens. His wife . . . is the lessener of his pain, and the augmenter of his pleasure. J. Rogers . - SETTLEMENT
A disposition of property for the benefit of some person or persons, usually through the medium of trustees, and for the benefit of a wife, children, or other relatives; jointure granted to a wife, or the act of granting it. 2. That which settles, - STILLSTAND
A standstill. Shak. - SMOOTH-CHINNED
Having a smooth chin; beardless. Drayton. - STILLING
A stillion. - COMPOSE
To arrange in a composing stick in order for printing; to set . (more info) 1. To form by putting together two or more things or parts; to put together; to make up; to fashion. Zeal ought to be composed of the hidhest degrees of all - UNFRAME
To take apart, or destroy the frame of. Dryden. - SUPREMITY
Supremacy. Fuller. - REWRITE
To write again. Young. - INSTILL
To drop in; to pour in drop by drop; hence, to impart gradually; to infuse slowly; to cause to be imbibed. That starlight dews All silently their tears of love instill. Byron. How hast thou instilled Thy malice into thousands. Milton. Syn. -- To - PISTILLIFEROUS
Pistillate. - DISQUIETTUDE
Want of peace or tranquility; uneasiness; disturbance; agitation; anxiety. Fears and disquietude, and unavoidable anxieties of mind. Abp. Sharp. - TROUSERING
Cloth or material for making trousers. - REDIMINISH
To diminish again. - PLAYWRITER
A writer of plays; a dramatist; a playwright. Lecky. - EFFLAGITATE
To ask urgently. Cockeram. - STORY-WRITER
1. One who writes short stories, as for magazines. 2. An historian; a chronicler. "Rathums, the story-writer." 1 Esdr. ii. 17. - DISQUIETLY
In a disquiet manner; uneasily; as, he rested disquietly that night. Wiseman. - EREMITE
A hermit. Thou art my heaven, and I thy eremite. Keats.