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Tender   /tˈɛndər/   Listen
adjective
Tender  adj.  (compar. tenderer; superl. tenderest)  
1.
Easily impressed, broken, bruised, or injured; not firm or hard; delicate; as, tender plants; tender flesh; tender fruit.
2.
Sensible to impression and pain; easily pained. "Our bodies are not naturally more tender than our faces."
3.
Physically weak; not hardly or able to endure hardship; immature; effeminate. "The tender and delicate woman among you."
4.
Susceptible of the softer passions, as love, compassion, kindness; compassionate; pitiful; anxious for another's good; easily excited to pity, forgiveness, or favor; sympathetic. "The Lord is very pitiful, and of tender mercy." "I am choleric by my nature, and tender by my temper."
5.
Exciting kind concern; dear; precious. "I love Valentine, Whose life's as tender to me as my soul!"
6.
Careful to save inviolate, or not to injure; with of. "Tender of property." "The civil authority should be tender of the honor of God and religion."
7.
Unwilling to cause pain; gentle; mild. "You, that are thus so tender o'er his follies, Will never do him good."
8.
Adapted to excite feeling or sympathy; expressive of the softer passions; pathetic; as, tender expressions; tender expostulations; a tender strain.
9.
Apt to give pain; causing grief or pain; delicate; as, a tender subject. "Things that are tender and unpleasing."
10.
(Naut.) Heeling over too easily when under sail; said of a vessel. Note: Tender is sometimes used in the formation of self-explaining compounds; as, tender-footed, tender-looking, tender-minded, tender-mouthed, and the like.
Synonyms: Delicate; effeminate; soft; sensitive; compassionate; kind; humane; merciful; pitiful.



noun
Tender  n.  
1.
One who tends; one who takes care of any person or thing; a nurse.
2.
(Naut.) A vessel employed to attend other vessels, to supply them with provisions and other stores, to convey intelligence, or the like.
3.
A car attached to a locomotive, for carrying a supply of fuel and water.



Tender  n.  
1.
(Law) An offer, either of money to pay a debt, or of service to be performed, in order to save a penalty or forfeiture, which would be incurred by nonpayment or nonperformance; as, the tender of rent due, or of the amount of a note, with interest. Note: To constitute a legal tender, such money must be offered as the law prescribes. So also the tender must be at the time and place where the rent or debt ought to be paid, and it must be to the full amount due.
2.
Any offer or proposal made for acceptance; as, a tender of a loan, of service, or of friendship; a tender of a bid for a contract. "A free, unlimited tender of the gospel."
3.
The thing offered; especially, money offered in payment of an obligation.
Legal tender. See under Legal.
Tender of issue (Law), a form of words in a pleading, by which a party offers to refer the question raised upon it to the appropriate mode of decision.



Tender  n.  Regard; care; kind concern. (Obs.)



verb
Tender  v. t.  (past & past part. tendered; pres. part. tendering)  
1.
(Law) To offer in payment or satisfaction of a demand, in order to save a penalty or forfeiture; as, to tender the amount of rent or debt.
2.
To offer in words; to present for acceptance. "You see how all conditions, how all minds,... tender down Their services to Lord Timon."



Tender  v. t.  To have a care of; to be tender toward; hence, to regard; to esteem; to value. (Obs.) "For first, next after life, he tendered her good." "Tender yourself more dearly." "To see a prince in want would move a miser's charity. Our western princes tendered his case, which they counted might be their own."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Tender" Quotes from Famous Books



... hitherto chosen to take notice of me, as known to them only by my public character, have for the greater part taken out, not, indeed, a poetical, but a critical, license to make game of me, instead of sending game to me. Thank heaven! I am in this respect more tough than tender. But, to be serious, I heartily thank you for your polite remembrance; and, though my feeble health and valetudinarian stomach force me to attach no little value to the present itself, I feel still more obliged by ...
— The Life of Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1838 • James Gillman

... whose minds it is given to me to fashion, not according to my will, but according as my skill and judgment shall, more or less, enable me to adapt my teachings to their natures? What shall I seek to engrave upon the clear tablets of their young and tender minds, in order that their future lot may be a joyous one? Let me illustrate (he will say) my profession. I will raise it high as the most honored among men, and for my monument I will say: "Look around; see the good works of those whom I have ...
— The Philosophy of Teaching - The Teacher, The Pupil, The School • Nathaniel Sands

... closed his eyes and smiled. A flood of tender memories stole into his heart from the sunlit fields of the South. He had gone hunting wild strawberries with Nan Primrose on the hills at home in North Carolina the day he first ...
— The Root of Evil • Thomas Dixon

... the sea, past the white, quaint-lanterned lighthouses of the South Foreland. There, in a kind of niche below the crest, we sat talking. It was a spacious day, serenely blue and warm, and on the wrinkled water remotely below a black tender and six hooded submarines came presently, and engaged in mysterious manoeuvers. Shrieking gulls and chattering jackdaws circled over us and below us, and dived and swooped; and a skerry of weedy, fallen chalk appeared, and ...
— The New Machiavelli • Herbert George Wells

... human nature that men devoted to venturesome forms of sport should often be tender-hearted as children. Lord Medenham, who had done some slaying in his time, once risked his life to save a favorite horse from a Ganges quicksand, and his right arm still bore the furrows plowed in it by claws that would ...
— Cynthia's Chauffeur • Louis Tracy


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