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soft spot
noun
a weak or vulnerable position, place, condition, etc..
a soft spot in their fortifications; a soft spot in the economy.
emotional susceptibility.
a soft spot for dogs and babies.
soft spot
noun
a sentimental fondness (esp in the phrase have a soft spot for )
Word History and Origins
Origin of soft spot1
Idioms and Phrases
A weak or vulnerable point, as in That's the soft spot in his argument . [Mid-1900s]
have a soft spot for . Have a tender or sentimental feeling for, as in Grandpa had a soft spot for Brian, his first grandson . This expression, first recorded in 1753 as “a soft place in one's heart,” uses soft in the sense of “tender.”
Example Sentences
Still, neither a soft spot in the schedule nor the realities of the calendar has remedied that issue.
Will older voters have a soft spot for this featherweight Gen X friends drama, or were they just watching to take notes on places to visit in upstate New York?
Carrie also has a soft spot for emotionally unavailable men; this one spends half of his life in London, making him physically unavailable for half the year as well.
"Obviously I have seven kids so you've got to think about them all but I have a soft spot for Kieran and what I did for him," he said.
"I had a beautiful old oak tree, that's gone. I've a soft spot for bats and used to love watch them flying around the oak tree in the evening, they've gone."
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