2TOUCH literary to touch something gently, in a way that seems pleasant or romantic 轻触,轻拍
Waves caressed the shore.
波浪轻轻拍打着海岸。
Examples from the Corpus
caress• Looming over the Everqueen it reached out to caress her cheek with its claw.• He began caressing her with a surprising gentleness.• She wanted so much to hold, touch, and caress her.• Barbara held the tinybaby close and caressed his cheek.• She was caressing his face when the phonerang, making them both jump a little.• Stan lovingly caressed my cheek.• The sunlightcaressed the crimson and white chrysanthemums in the abandonedcourtyard.• Camerascaress them from every angle.• Their hands - podgy, thin, freckled or pale - touched everything, prodding, caressing, tickling, squeezing.
caress2 noun [countableC] especially literary
TOUCHa gentle touch or kiss that shows you love someone 爱抚,抚摸;亲吻
Examples from the Corpus
caress• So light a caress to do so much!• He observed naughtily, subtly, wittily, passively, on occasion with a felinecaress.• Suddenly it was no longer enough to accept his caresses without responding.• There was no inhumanobscenecaress, no acidcaking on her flesh.• Her body was a new one under his sensualcaresses, reborn for this man who held her heart.• Yet the caress of his meaning was delicate as the first greenfronds of spring.• Skye stood by the hotelbus, basking in the unfamiliarcaress.
Origincaress2
(1600-1700)Frenchcaresse, from Italiancarezza, from caro“dear”, from Latincarus; → CHARITY