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"solicitously" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows that you are very concerned for somebody and want to make sure that they are comfortable, well or happy

21 Sentences With "solicitously"

How to use solicitously in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "solicitously" and check conjugation/comparative form for "solicitously". Mastering all the usages of "solicitously" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The "guests" cocked their heads solicitously and inquired after one another's make-believe families.
Hannity, smiling solicitously throughout, let the roar of the crowd stand in for his response.
Mr. Murphy, a slender, dapper man, uses a cane when he walks, with Mr. O'Sullivan solicitously supporting his elbow.
A mound of Trump-covered copies of The Economist has pride of place: "I put you up front," he says solicitously.
"I got you the malbec," he told his manager, solicitously, as she motioned to order another glass of whatever it was she was drinking.
She turned to see him holding a flagon toward her cup solicitously, as if she hadn't been carefully ignoring him for most of the evening.
When my friend finally reached someone at the company, she was greeted solicitously and told she could have a desk on another part of the floor away from the offending fraternity.
When they were done, Winston reached for Errol and helped him to his feet, then Benson led the pregnant girl into the shack and helped her into bed, while Errol, crouching in pain, tried to smile solicitously.
But Mr. Trump has signaled a new willingness to make a deal with Mr. Xi, a leader he has treated solicitously and will meet over dinner on Saturday in Buenos Aires, after a summit meeting of leaders of the Group of 20 industrialized nations.
Maybe he liked the sport of it, of catching us off-guard, and suddenly there he was gently, solicitously proffering notions of murder so that he could find and hang the murderer, thus fulfilling the cycle of sin and recompense that gives order to this cryptic world and would show him to be in control of his parishes.
We then, the sergeant and > I, put him to bed, the sergeant all the time solicitously muttering, 'I bror > 'im home. Jus' a l'il drunk, tha's all, pore f'ler.' Next morning Ted came > down to breakfast fresh as a daisy and saw the broken halves of his umbrella > which Mrs. Rodenhurst had carefully laid on the sofa.
There Aleksey Tolstoy visited Pavlova, who was working not only as a poet, but also as a translator among Russian, French and German. She translated his poetry and plays into German. He in turn secured a pension for her from the Russian government and corresponded warmly and solicitously with her until his death in 1875.Heldt, Barbara.
A few days after the incident, a Soviet delegate to the United Nations inquired solicitously whether the United States was interested in receiving aid earmarked for "undeveloped countries".Charles A. Murray & Catherine Bly Cox, in Apollo: The Race to the Moon. (United States of America: Simon & Schuster Inc.), 1989, page 23-24) The concurrent project Explorer 1 proved successful a few weeks later, on 1 February 1958.
People are ideally nursed in a kind, frustration-free environment, since, when given or taken in high doses, benzodiazepines are more likely to cause paradoxical reactions. If shown sympathy, even quite crudely feigned, people may respond solicitously, but they may respond with disproportionate aggression to frustrating cues. Opportunistic counseling has limited value here, as the person is unlikely to recall this later, owing to drug-induced anterograde amnesia.
Zhang Erting, an honest farmer, tells to Zhou Enlai that he has a bone to pick with the public dining hall () and it should be adjustment and he is against the way of dining. He complains to Zhou Enlai that the people are hungry that's because some officials and cooks ate and took more than their shark. Zhang Erting's opinion broke the silence, Zhou Enlai listens to them carefully and asks solicitously. In the small hours of the fourth day, Zhou Enlai has a long talk with Mao Zedong on the phone.
Laura Jesson, a respectable middle-class British woman in an affectionate but rather dull marriage, tells her story while sitting at home with her husband, imagining that she is confessing her affair to him. Laura, like many women of her class at the time, goes to a nearby town every Thursday for shopping and to the cinema for a matinée. Returning from one such excursion to Milford, while waiting in the railway station's refreshment room, she is helped by another passenger, who solicitously removes a piece of grit from her eye. The man is Alec Harvey, an idealistic general practitioner who also works one day a week as a consultant at the local hospital.
As described in a film magazine, Mary (Thomas) and John (Collier), residents of the county poor farm, have had their lots cast there by a train wreck from which they were taken as babies and the identity of their parents lost. The two are the closest of friends and Mary is everybody's sweetheart about the place. She concentrates her gospel of cheer and kindness of heart, however, on John and old Corporal Joe (Wilson), a Civil War veteran, mothering the two most solicitously. When John is placed out to work on a neighboring farm and there is a change in matrons that makes life at the county farm house unbearable, the Corporal and Mary, the latter in clothes taken from a scarecrow, leave with John accompanying them.
Sor Juana's arch took the allegorical theme of Neptune. The title of her explanatory publication was "Allegorical Neptune, Ocean of Colors, Political Simulacrum, Erected by the Noble, Holy, and August Metropolitan Church of Mexico City, in the Magnificent Allegorical Concepts of a Triumphal Arch Solicitously Consecrated and Lovingly Dedicated to the Joyful Entrance of the Most Excellent Don Tomás Antonio de la Cerda, Count of Paredes, Marquess de la Laguna, Viceroy, Governor, and Captain General of Our New Spain". Choosing the theme of "allegorical Neptune" might be her allusion to the viceroy's noble title Marquess de la Laguna (marquess of the lake) and "the arch was a model of the virtues of kings and princes such as Neptune and the Viceroy."The viceroy became a patron of Sor Juana, continuing the practice dating from the viceroy, the Marquis of Mancera.
Katharina Stöckl-Kreis had grown up in an orphanage, looked after by nuns who had solicitously educated her in a formidable range of house-wifely skills, and brought a steely practicality to the challenges of raising a family on her own during the war years. But as her daughter later recalled, during the first four decades of her life she had not been well prepared for factory work: her fingers were almost always bandaged. Many of Ula's most vivid childhood memories relate to her family's experiences of the wartime bombing of Ulm, clutching one of her mother's hands while her younger sister clutched the other and night after night they watched the city burn. Their home and the surrounding area were destroyed on 17 December 1944: collateral damage included three dead siblings, but both her parents had survived.
The public was not left without the favorable attention his cycle of romances on verses of Musa Jalil. : The main composer achievement of Joseph Pustylnik was the creation the first Chuvash Opera "Narspi" ("Runaway"), which he wrote in 1952 on the poem "Narspi" the K. Ivanov (libretto by I. Maximov-Koshkinskiy and P. Gradov). In March 1955 forces of the choir, orchestra and solicitously state Philharmonic society and the Chuvash state ensemble of song and dance in Cheboksary 3 pictures of the Opera were delivered (musical Director F. Lukin, conductor Century A. Kudashev, directed by I. Maximov-Koshkinskiy, artist P. D. Dmitriev, starring made soprano T. Chumakova). Unfortunately the great success of the Opera did not have, but went down in history of the Chuvash people as the first Opera of the life of simple Chuvashes.
Lord Londonderry praised Middleton as the architect of the Conservative victory in the 1895 general election The historian Richard Shannon assessed Middleton's contribution to the Conservatives: > It was Middleton's skill as an electioneering manager to optimize the > prevailing benefits available to the Conservative Party. ... He shrewdly > kept fences well mended with the police and the drink trade, and > solicitously cultivated the ‘new journalism’ represented most famously by > the Harmsworths and the Daily Mail. ... The reputation of Middleton and > Central Office...was ‘made’ by the greater achievement in 1895 of gaining a > small but telling overall Conservative majority within the Unionist > coalition. Lord Londonderry hailed Middleton on behalf of the National Union > as the ‘brilliant agent’, who had done ‘more than anybody else to secure the > great victory we have achieved’. ... With the unprecedented ‘double’ of > Unionist triumph in the ‘khaki’ election of 1900...Middleton's reputation > attained its ultimate lustre.

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