Tactile has many relatives in English, from the oft-synonymous tangible to familiar words like intact, tact, tangent, contingent, and even entire. All of these can be traced back to the Latin verb tangere, meaning “to touch.” Tactile was adopted by English speakers in the early 1600s (possibly by way of the French tactile) from the Latin adjective tactilis (“tangible”). In light of tactile having tangere for a touchstone, its dual senses of “perceptible by touch” and “of, relating to, or being the sense of touch” are perfectly sensible. Since the advent of film, television, and, ahem, touchscreens, a new sense also appears to be developing, as tactile is increasingly used to suggest that something visual is particularly evocative or suggestive of a certain texture.
Examples of tactile in a Sentence
He not only had visual difficulties but tactile ones, too—witness his grasping his wife's head and mistaking it for a hat …—Oliver Sacks, New Yorker, 7 Oct. 2002There is a tactile and therefore somatic dimension to stroking the chalk that keeps the artist in constant, responsible and responsive touch with his emerging creation.—Jed Perl, New Republic, 17 June 2002The keyboard has good tactile feedback, and the touch pad is responsive without being too twitchy.—Bruce Brown, PC Magazine, 20 Feb. 2001… nothing prepared me for the tactile reality of the original volumes, leaf after carefully written leaf over which his hand had travelled …—Edmund Morris, New Yorker, 16 Jan. 1995Near midday the heat of the sun bounced up from the bare patches of soil to hit with an almost tactile force.—Edward O. Wilson, Smithsonian, October 1984
The thick brushstrokes give the painting a tactile quality.
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Calf & Pony Hair The sleek, tactile surface of pony hair adds a bold edge to any accessory, creating a striking contrast in bags, hats, and footwear.—Cortne Bonilla, Vogue, 9 Nov. 2025 Humans outperform robots in accuracy The researchers compared human performance with that of a robotic tactile sensor trained using a Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) algorithm.—Aamir Khollam, Interesting Engineering, 7 Nov. 2025 Is the Ziploc baggie a tactile reminder, a physical embodiment of her beliefs?—Laura Trujillo, USA Today, 6 Nov. 2025 Roach prefers that his skilled humans focus on craftsmanship, doing jobs with tactile precision that only human hands and vision can accomplish.—IEEE Spectrum, 5 Nov. 2025 See All Example Sentences for tactile
Word History
Etymology
French or Latin; French, from Latin tactilis, from tangere to touch — more at tangent entry 2
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