silentious

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English[edit]

Adjective[edit]

silentious (comparative more silentious, superlative most silentious)

  1. Habitually taciturn; prone to silence.
    • 1749, John Cleland, Fanny Hill[1], Letter the First:
      Yet Will had very good qualities too: gentle, tractable, and, above all, grateful; silentious, even to a fault: he spoke, at any time, very little, but made it up emphatically with action;
    • 1832, Frances Burney, Memoirs of Doctor Burney[2], volume 2, London: Edward Moxon, pages 50–51:
      Can Bruce be other than Scotch? They are far more entertaining, I think, as well as informing, taken in the common run, than we silentious English; who, taken en masse, are tolerably dull.
    • 1906, William Dean Howells, “Oxford”, in Certain Delightful English Towns[3], New York: Harper, page 205:
      It [the love of learning] is there [in Oxford] so fitly housed [] that it might almost dream itself a type of what should always and everywhere be an emanation of the literature to which it shall return after its earthly avatar, and rest, a blessed ghost, between the leaves of some fortunate book on an unvisited shelf of a vast silentious and oblivious library.
    • 2013, M. P. Wright, chapter 39, in Heartman,[4], Edinburgh: Black & White Publishing, page 341:
      [] As I’m fond of informing some of my less educated but wealthy clients, ‘silence is often the answer’. Let’s say ten thousand pounds or guineas: could that buy a silentious disposition, sir?”

Related terms[edit]