English edit

Etymology edit

From assuage (to relieve, soothe) on the model of persuasive.

Adjective edit

assuasive (comparative more assuasive, superlative most assuasive)

  1. Mild, soothing.
    • 1713, Alexander Pope, Ode for Musick[1], London: Bernard Lintott, pages 2–3:
      If in the Breast tumultuous Joys arise,
      Musick her soft, assuasive Voice applies;
      Or when the Soul is press’d with Cares
      Exalts her in enlivening Airs.
    • 1854, Charles Dickens, “Book 3, Chapter 3, p. 282,”, in Hard Times. For These Times, London: Bradbury & Evans, [], →OCLC:
      [] Perhaps,” said Bounderby, starting with all his might at his so quiet and assuasive father-in-law, “you know where your daughter is at the present time?”
    • 1882, Nathaniel Hawthorne, chapter 12, in Doctor Grimshawe’s Secret[2], Boston: James R. Osgood, published 1883, page 152:
      The medicine, whatever it might be, had the merit, rare in doctor’s stuff, of being pleasant to take, assuasive of thirst, and imbued with a hardly perceptible fragrance,
    • 1965, Robert Wilder, chapter 1, in Fruit of the Poppy,[3], New York: Putnam, page 16:
      The stuff gagged him but he forced it down. This wasn’t smart but the alcohol had an assuasive effect.

Derived terms edit

Noun edit

assuasive (plural assuasives)

  1. (archaic) Anything that soothes.
    • 1808, Thomas Coke, chapter 1, in A History of the West Indies[4], volume 1, Liverpool, page 65:
      [] the heat of the sun operates in all its vigour, without an assuasive to mitigate its force.
    • 1817, Richard Yates, The Basis of National Welfare, London: F. C. and J. Rivington et al., § 9, p. 112,[5]
      the bland, the courteous, the truly Christian assuasives of friendly attention
    • 1908, Mary Virginia Terhune (as Marion Harland), The Housekeeper’s Week, Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, Chapter 23, p. 312,[6]
      Nature, as the laity may know it, is a vast pharmacopœia of assuasives and curatives