emotionable
English
editEtymology
editAdjective
editemotionable (comparative more emotionable, superlative most emotionable)
- (rare, of a person or group or of their behavior or faculties) Particularly expressive of or affected by emotion.
- 1887, Emily Lawless, Hurrish: A Study, page 24:
- His was the genuine Celtic temperament—poetic, excitable, emotionable, unreasoning.
- 1929, Robert Seymour Bridges, The Testament of Beauty, page 529:
- Delicat and subtle are the dealings of nature
whereby the emotionable sense secretly is touch'd
to awareness
- 2007, Ulrich Libbrecht, Within the Four Seas: Introduction to Comparative Philosophy, →ISBN, page 578:
- Consequently man was an emotionable being and this emotion was the basis for morality.
Usage notes
edit- Unlike the term emotional, emotionable does not seem to have the additional sense "of or pertaining to emotion."[1]
Synonyms
editTranslations
editexpressive
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References
edit- ^ See "emotionable" in Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed., 1989.