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)
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"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
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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.
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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
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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
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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)