solicitous

caring

TRANSLATION

solicitous = fürsorglich, besorgt (um jemanden); aufmerksam, zuvorkommend; eifrig bedacht (auf etwas); beflissen; (ängstlich) bemüht

STATISTICS

IN THE PRESS

"In person, Melling is naturally curious, freely SOLICITOUS of my opinions about the film or book recommendations in general."

Jackson McHenry — Vulture (20th February 2026)

"Helen, who has the most SOLICITOUS husband in the world, believes that divorced people give up too easily."

Allegra Goodman — The New Yorker (4th January 2026)

 

Did you
know?

solicitous
adjective

- Showing eager, attentive concern for the comfort or wellbeing of another person; characterised by anxious care or watchful consideration. 

- Carefully eager or desirous; showing a readiness to oblige or please beyond what mere duty requires; earnestly attentive to the wishes of others.

Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary


WORD ORIGIN

The Romans were anxious people — at least linguistically. Their adjective sollicitus meant "thoroughly agitated" or "in a state of nervous tension," built from sollus (whole, entire) and citus (set in motion, roused). The picture is vivid: a person completely stirred up, every part of them in a flutter of concern.

From sollicitus came the verb sollicitare — to disturb, to shake, to urge persistently — which passed into Old French and entered Middle English in the 15th century as soliciten, meaning to entreat or to press for something.

Solicitous as a standalone adjective — meaning carefully attentive rather than merely pestering — arrived in English by the mid-16th century and gradually shed most of its anxious edge, settling into its modern meaning: an almost warm, hovering attentiveness directed at another person's wellbeing.

It is worth noting that the closely related word solicitor travelled a slightly different road. In British English it became the standard term for a lawyer who deals directly with clients — the etymology makes a quiet kind of sense: a solicitor was originally someone who urged, pleaded, and pressed on your behalf.


HOW SOLICITOUS ARE YOU?

Research in organisational psychology suggests that feeling genuinely cared for by colleagues — not just managed, but noticed — is one of the strongest predictors of workplace engagement and loyalty. Yet the gap between intending to show concern and actually showing it is surprisingly wide. A solicitous question ("How are you holding up with that project?") takes four seconds to ask. The effect can last for days. Here are three situations where a well-placed solicitous gesture lands particularly well:

After a colleague makes a presentation that did not go quite as planned — a quiet word costs nothing and is remembered for years. Before a client call that you know has been stressful for your contact — asking whether they need any materials sent ahead signals respect for their time and nerves.

When someone returns from illness or a difficult absence — welcoming them back with attentive warmth rather than an immediate pile of catch-up tasks tells them everything about how much you value them as a person, not just a function.

Solicitousness is not the same as fussing. People feel the difference immediately.

Helga & Paul Smith


SYNONYMS

accommodating, anxious (for another's welfare), assiduous, attentive, caring, chivalrous, compassionate, concerned, conscientious, considerate, dedicated, gallant, gracious, heedful, helpful, kind, loving, mindful, nurturing, obliging, regardful, SOLICITOUS, tender, thoughtful, vigilant, watchful


SMUGGLE OWAD into a conversation today, say something like:

"Good managers are genuinely SOLICITOUS — one always felt noticed as a person, not just as a pair of hands."


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Paul (OWAD Founder)

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