| 释义 | 
		solicitousso‧lic‧i‧tous /səˈlɪsɪtəs/ adjective formal    solicitousOrigin: 1500-1600 Latin sollicitus  ‘anxious’  - Larry spoke to Davis in sympathetic and solicitous tones during the interview.
 
 - Conversation stopped and everyone became frightfully solicitous.
 - He dashed about her, solicitous but irascible.
 - My silences made him solicitous of me.
 - The boys were solicitous of each other's confidence: the quick were sensitive with the slow.
 - The door was locked but the Lady Eleanor could trust Dame Agatha, who was ever solicitous for her happiness.
 - We can see the soft expression in their eyes, caring and solicitous, watchful.
 
    very concerned about someone’s safety, health, or comfort—solicitously adverb—solicitousness noun [uncountable]  |