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ten·der 1 (t n d r)adj. ten·der·er, ten·der·est 1. a. Easily crushed or bruised; fragile: a tender petal. b. Easily chewed or cut: tender beef. 2. Young and vulnerable: of tender age. 3. Frail; delicate. 4. Sensitive to frost or severe cold; not hardy: tender green shoots. 5. a. Easily hurt; sensitive: tender skin. b. Painful; sore: a tender tooth. 6. a. Considerate and protective; solicitous: a tender mother; his tender concern. b. Characterized by or expressing gentle emotions; loving: a tender glance; a tender ballad. c. Given to sympathy or sentimentality; soft: a tender heart. 7. Nautical Likely to heel easily under sail; crank. tr.v. ten·dered, ten·der·ing, ten·ders 1. To make tender. 2. Archaic To treat with tender regard.
[Middle English, from Old French tendre, from Latin tener; see ten- in Indo-European roots.]
ten der·ly adv. ten der·ness n. |
ten·der 2 (t n d r)n.1. A formal offer, as: a. Law An offer of money or service in payment of an obligation. b. A written offer to contract goods or services at a specified cost or rate; a bid. 2. Something, especially money, offered in payment. tr.v. ten·dered, ten·der·ing, ten·ders To offer formally: tender a letter of resignation. See Synonyms at offer.
[From French tendre, to offer, from Old French, from Latin tendere, to hold forth, extend; see ten- in Indo-European roots.]
ten der·er n. |
tend·er 3 (t n d r)n.1. One who tends something: a lathe tender. 2. Nautical A vessel attendant on other vessels, especially one that ferries supplies between ship and shore. 3. A railroad car attached to the rear of a locomotive and designed to carry fuel and water. |
Translations tendering n no pl (Comm) → Angebotsabgabe f
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