Word Meanings - PALLIATIVE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Serving to palliate; serving to extenuate or mitigate.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of PALLIATIVE)
- Lenitive
- Palliative
- initiative
- soothing
- Sedative
- Allaying
- tranquillizing
- composing
- demulcent
- palliative
- assuasive
- lenient
- anodyne
- hypnotic
Related words: (words related to PALLIATIVE)
- HYPNOTIC
 1. Having the quality of producing sleep; tending to produce sleep; soporific. 2. Of or pertaining to hypnotism; in a state of hypnotism; liable to hypnotism; as, a hypnotic condition.
- COMPOSITOUS
 Belonging to the Compositæ; composite. Darwin.
- DEMULCENT
 Softening; mollifying; soothing; assuasive; as, oil is demulcent.
- PALLIATIVE
 Serving to palliate; serving to extenuate or mitigate.
- LENIENTLY
 In a lenient manner.
- COMPOSURE
 1. The act of composing, or that which is composed; a composition. Signor Pietro, who had an admirable way both of composure and teaching. Evelyn. 2. Orderly adjustment; disposition. Various composures and combinations of these corpuscles.
- COMPOSSIBLE
 Able to exist with another thing; consistent. Chillingworth.
- 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
- COMPOSER
 1. One who composes; an author. Specifically, an author of a piece of music. If the thoughts of such authors have nothing in them, they at least . . . show an honest industry and a good intention in the composer. Addison. His most brilliant and
- COMPOSITE
 Belonging to a certain order which is composed of the Ionic order grafted upon the Corinthian. It is called also the Roman or the Italic order, and is one of the five orders recognized by the Italian writers of the sixteenth century. See Capital.
- SOOTHNESS
 Truth; reality. Chaucer.
- LENITIVENESS
 The quality of being lenitive.
- COMPOSTURE
 Manure; compost. Shak.
- ANODYNE
 Serving to assuage pain; soothing. The anodyne draught of oblivion. Burke. Note: "The word in chiefly applied to the different preparations of opium, belladonna, hyoscyamus, and lettuce." Am. Cyc.
- COMPOSITAE
 A large family of dicotyledonous plants, having their flowers arranged in dense heads of many small florets and their anthers united in a tube. The daisy, dandelion, and asters, are examples.
- SOOTHLY
 In truth; truly; really; verily. "Soothly for to say." Chaucer.
- SOOTH
 soth, AS. s, for san; akin to OS. s, OHG. sand, Icel. sannr, Sw. sann, Dan. sand, Skr. sat, sant, real, genuine, present, being; properly p. pr. from a root meaning, to be, Skr. as, L. esse; also akin to Goth. sunjis true, Gr. satya. Absent, Am,
- ASSUASIVE
 Mitigating; tranquilizing; soothing. Music her soft assuasive voice applies. Pope. (more info) L. assuadere to persuade to; or from E. pref. ad + -suasive as in
- COMPOS-MENTIS
 One who is compos mentis.
- COMPOSED
 Free from agitation; calm; sedate; quiet; tranquil; self- possessed. The Mantuan there in sober triumph sate, Composed his posture, and his look sedate. Pope. -- Com*pos"ed*ly (, adv. -- Com*pos"ed*ness, n.
- INDECOMPOSABLENESS
 Incapableness of decomposition; stability; permanence; durability.
- DECOMPOSE
 To separate the constituent parts of; to resolve into original elements; to set free from previously existing forms of chemical combination; to bring to dissolution; to rot or decay.
- DECOMPOSITION
 1. The act or process of resolving the constituent parts of a compound body or substance into its elementary parts; separation into constituent part; analysis; the decay or dissolution consequent on the removal or alteration of some of
- AUTOHYPNOTIC
 Pert. to autohypnotism; self-hypnotizing. -- n.
- TRANQUILIZE; TRANQUILLIZE
 To render tranquil; to allay when agitated; to compose; to make calm and peaceful; as, to tranquilize a state disturbed by factions or civil commotions; to tranquilize the mind. Syn. -- To quiet; compose; still; soothe; appease; calm; pacify. (more
- FORSOOTH
 In truth; in fact; certainly; very well; -- formerly used as an expression of deference or respect, especially to woman; now used ironically or contemptuously. A fit man, forsooth, to govern a realm! Hayward. Our old English word forsooth has been
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