pensive

Definitions  ·  Examples  ·  Pronunciations  ·  Etymologies  ·  Related  ·  Statistics  ·  Comments  · 
The performances were also a bit more pensive, as contestants sang inspirational ballads with a serious tone.

View all »
Definitions (9)

Toggle American Heritage definitions American Heritage Dictionary (3)

  1. adjective Deeply, often wistfully or dreamily thoughtful.
  2. adjective Suggestive or expressive of melancholy thoughtfulness.
  3. Syntax Note
    Synonyms: pensive, contemplative, reflective, meditative, thoughtful
    These adjectives mean characterized by or disposed to thought, especially serious or deep thought. Pensive often connotes a wistful, dreamy, or sad quality: "while pensive poets painful vigils keep” (Alexander Pope).
    Contemplative implies slow directed consideration, often with conscious intent of achieving better understanding or spiritual or aesthetic enrichment: "The Contemplative Atheist is rare ... And yet they seem to be more than they are” (Francis Bacon).
    Reflective suggests careful analytical deliberation, as in reappraising past experience: "Cromwell was of the active, not the reflective temper” (John Morley).
    Meditative implies earnest sustained thought: The scholar was reticent, aloof, and meditative.
    Thoughtful can refer to absorption in thought or to the habit of reflection and circumspection: Thoughtful voters carefully considered the candidates.

Toggle Century definitions Century Dictionary (3)

Toggle GNU Webster definitions GNU Webster's 1913 (1)

Toggle WordNet definitions WordNet (2)

Toggle elsewhere links Elsewhere on the web

View all »
Examples (50)

 

Tags

Sign up or sign in to add tags.

Words tagged pensive

Stats

This word has been looked up 221 times.

On Twitter

Photos from

flickr images

Add a related word »
Related

Roget's II Roget's II: The New Thesaurus

Allen's Allen's Synonyms and Antonyms

Used in the same context Used in the Same Context

thoughtful ·  wistful ·  dreamy ·  meditative ·  dejected ·  tranquil ·  sad ·  moody ·  somber ·  listless ·  regretful ·  austere
Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary. Copyright © 2003, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Etymologies (2)

Toggle American Heritage etymologies American Heritage Dictionary (1)

  1. Middle English pensif, from Old French, from penser, to think, from Latin pēnsāre, frequentative of pendere, to weigh; see (s)pen- in Indo-European roots.

Toggle Century etymologies Century Dictionary (1)

  1. from Middle English pensif, from Old French (also F.) pensif (= Italian pensivo), from penser, think, from Latin pensare, weigh, consider, from pendere, past participle pensus, hang, weigh: see pendent. Cf. poise.
 

Pronunciations
Record your own »

/ˈpɛnsɪv/
by American Heritage

Charts

frequency chart

Bubble size: how much this word was used in a year

Bubble height: used more or less than expected, vs. all uses evenly distributed

You can expect to see this word a few times a month.

Recently looked up

solar-thermal · smaller-sized · interjection · Bestiality · shade

Recent Favorites

pygopagus · sanglant · Astacus · sweetbread · qualms

Recent Pronunciations

procrastinate · its not like im ugly people tell me im pretty · be careful! the razor is razor-sharp! · minty-fresh death threat · please stop sucking the monkeybread