sentiment

[ sen-tuh-muh nt ]
/ ˈsɛn tə mənt /

noun

an attitude toward something; regard; opinion.
a mental feeling; emotion: a sentiment of pity.
refined or tender emotion; manifestation of the higher or more refined feelings.
exhibition or manifestation of feeling or sensibility, or appeal to the tender emotions, in literature, art, or music.
a thought influenced by or proceeding from feeling or emotion.
the thought or feeling intended to be conveyed by words, acts, or gestures as distinguished from the words, acts, or gestures themselves.

Origin of sentiment

1325–75; < Medieval Latin sentīmentum, equivalent to Latin sentī(re) to feel + -mentum -ment; replacing Middle English sentement < Old French < Medieval Latin, as above

synonym study for sentiment

1. See opinion. 2. See feeling. 3. Sentiment, sentimentality are terms for sensitiveness to emotional feelings. Sentiment is a sincere and refined sensibility, a tendency to be influenced by emotion rather than reason or fact: to appeal to sentiment. Sentimentality implies affected, excessive, sometimes mawkish sentiment: weak sentimentality.

OTHER WORDS FROM sentiment

sen·ti·ment·less, adjective

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH sentiment

sentiment sentimentality (see synonym study at the current entry)

Example sentences from the Web for sentiment

British Dictionary definitions for sentiment

sentiment
/ (ˈsɛntɪmənt) /

noun

Word Origin for sentiment

C17: from Medieval Latin sentīmentum, from Latin sentīre to feel