placify

English

Etymology

Compare pacify, placid.

This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.

Verb

placify (third-person singular simple present placifies, present participle placifying, simple past and past participle placified)

  1. (rare) To create a peaceful and calm environment; to make placid.
  2. (rare, transitive) To calm (someone), to pacify.
    • 1869, “Foreign and Colonial News: Austro-Hungary”, in The Illustrated London News, page 582:
      According to the last accounts from Cattaro, all the southern districts have been placified
    • 1883 February, “Archbishop Tait”, in The Scottish Review, page 228:
      The present writer has seen two letters of Bishop Wilberforce to Archbishop Longley, one speaking very severely of the Bishop of Cape Town's overbearing; the other chuckling at having ‘placified’ him, though pacifying, he thought, was out of any man's reach.
    • 1929, Alan Patrick Herbert, Topsy, M.P., page 144:
      and of course seeing the legions of the male massing more and more against me did not tend to placify the combatious little soul,
    • 2017, Aaron Goff, Ruppert, Roids & Rings[1], page 302:
      The money was meant to placify Sean and keep him from going forward with pressing charges or putting together a lawsuit against his attackers.
  3. To put (someone) in their place, at times brutally.
    (Can we verify(+) this sense?)