Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Apprehensive

Apprehensive ({not transcribed}) , adjective

[Compare French appréhensif. See Apprehend.]

1.
Capable of apprehending, or quick to do so; apt; discerning.
It may be pardonable to imagine that a friend, a kind and apprehensive... friend, is listening to our talk. — Hawthorne
2.
Knowing; conscious; cognizant. [Rare]
A man that has spent his younger years in vanity and folly, and is, by the grace of God, apprehensive of it. — Jer. Taylor
3.
Relating to the faculty of apprehension.
Judgment... is implied in every apprehensive act. — Sir W. Hamilton
4.
Anticipative of something unfavorable' fearful of what may be coming; in dread of possible harm; in expectation of evil.
Not at all apprehensive of evils as a distance. — Tillotson
Reformers... apprehensive for their lives. — Gladstone
5.
Sensible; feeling; perceptive. [Rare]
Thoughts, my tormentors, armed with deadly stings, Mangle my apprehensive, tenderest parts. — Milton