caressive

Having the nature of a caress; gentle, soothing.

Adjective

  1. Having the nature of a caress; gentle, soothing.
    • But the faithful creature [a dog] had soon returned, and comprehending that his mistress was confined in this great stone building, he whined and howled, waiting, within ten feet of the sentinel, a caressive reply. -...
    • Too true that her soft eyes were constantly suffused with tears, and that, when speaking to me, her voice was inexpressibly tender and caressive—her smile so sad, so pitiful, that it would have touched the heart of a...
    • 'It's a lovely day, today!' Mrs Bolton would say in her caressive, persuasive voice. - 1928, D[avid] H[erbert] Lawrence, chapter IX, in Lady Chatterley’s Lover, [Germany?]: Privately printed, →OCLC, page 114:

    Synonyms: comforting emollient mollifying

  2. Of a diminutive: indicating affection or endearment.
    • All diminutives eaſily acquire a careſſive character, as animula, ocellus, &c. the Greeks even called their diminutives ὐποκρισικα; and the ſofter form, lin, rather than kin, would moſt naturally be ſo appropriated. -...
    • Russian diminutives are of two kinds: caressive and contemptuous; ex. домъ, a house, до́микъ, a pretty little house, домѝшко, a miserable hut. - 1827, James Heard, A Practical Grammar of the Russian Language, St....
    • Ling (a termination inherited from the Anglo-Saxons,) is either a diminutive, as little, or descriptive of family, as kind. Hence we have darling, (or dearling,) firstling, foundling, gosling, &c. Some of these have a...

Origin

From caress + -ive.

Forms

more caressive most caressive

Related

caress caresser caressingly

Derived

caressively

Noun

  1. A type of diminutive indicating affection or endearment.
    • [W]e, like the ancient Mexicans and many another lower race, have terms of praise and endearment,—"a jewel of a babe," and the like,—legions of caressives and diminutives in the use of which some of the Low German...
    • An interesting characteristic of the following extracts is the abundance of diminutives also termed “caressives” in Greek. -άκι, -ίτσα and -ούλα here are derivational suffixes for indexing the diminutive and their use...
    • One another suffix used as a caressive and appellative is -(l)y. Like -kAy, it is attached to kinship terms, generally to the ones expressing closer relationships. - 2015, Fatma Şahan Güney, “Eurasia [Tatar]”, in Nicola...

Forms

caressives