gentle

UK /ˈdʒɛntl̩/ US /ˈdʒɛntl̩/
adj 5verb 4noun 3name 1

Definitions

adj

1

Tender and amiable; of a considerate or kindly disposition.

Stuart is a gentle man; he would never hurt you.

2

Soft and mild rather than hard or severe.

I felt something touch my shoulder; it was gentle and a little slimy.

Here the stripped panelling was warmly gold and the pictures, mostly of the English school, were mellow and gentle in the afternoon light.

3

Docile and easily managed.

We had a gentle swim in the lake.

a gentle horse

4

Gradual rather than steep or sudden.

The walks in this area have a gentle incline.

5

Polite and respectful rather than rude.

He gave me a gentle reminder that we had to hurry up.

verb

1

To become gentle.

“She's experienced a horrific and nasty scare and is in a state of shock, but otherwise she's relatively okay.” Conrad replied, his tone at first grim (as he recalled what he'd seen in the family room) and then it gentled to a more doctorial tone as he directed his next comments to his patient.

2

To ennoble.

[…] For he to-day that sheds his blood with me / Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile, / This day shall gentle his condition […]

3

To break; to tame; to domesticate.

Yakima could have tried to catch him, gentle him as Wolf had been gentled, but having two stallions in his cavvy would lead to a different kind of trouble.

4

To soothe; to calm; to make gentle.

A hornist, his playing gentled by perspective, is out of sight within the woods, but his notes are heard through or over the murmuring mix of bird song and breeze in leaves.

noun

1

A person of high birth.

Gentles, methinks you frown.

While actual medieval societies were full of lots of peasants and a few rich and noble gentles, SCA personas tend to be nobles rather than commoners.

2

A maggot used as bait by anglers.

Pooh! the whole thing is as alive and wrigging as an angler's box of gentles

Years ago, on Victoria's Port Phillip Bay, the recognised bait for garfish were `gentles', a genteel word for maggots, which were especially grown for gar fishermen.

3

A trained falcon, or falcon-gentil.

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