comfort
https://gyazo.com/a3edc38f069eef343a323d9df791595d
noun
1. a state of physical ease and freedom from pain or constraint:
慰め, (心の)やすらぎ, 安心感
e.g. room for four people to travel in comfort.
(comforts) things that contribute to physical ease and well-being:
〖通例~s〗 (家電製品などの)日常生活を楽に[快適に]してくれる物, 便利な品
e.g. the low upholstered chair was one of the room's few comforts.
prosperity and the pleasant lifestyle secured by it:
快適さ, 心地よさ, 安楽, 気楽
e.g. my father left us enough to live in comfort.
2. the easing or alleviation of a person's feelings of grief or distress:
〖通例a ~〗 【人にとって】慰めとなる事[物, 人] «to, for» ; 〖形容詞的に〗安心を与える
e.g. a few words of comfort
e.g. they should take comfort that help is available.
in singular a person or thing that helps to alleviate a difficult situation:
e.g. his friendship was a great comfort.
3. US dialect a warm quilt.
⦅米⦆ = comforter
verb with object
ease the grief or distress of; console:
〈人〉を慰める, 元気づける; 〈子供〉をなだめる
e.g. she broke down in tears and her friend tried to comfort her.
improve the mood of or restore a sense of well-being to:
〈体の部位〉の痛みを和らげる.
e.g. he dined outdoors, comforted by the crackling sounds of the fire.
PHRASES
too — for comfort
causing physical or mental unease by an excess of the specified quality:
e.g. it can be too hot for comfort in July and August.
ORIGIN
Middle English (as a noun, in the senses ‘strengthening, support, consolation’; as a verb, in the senses ‘strengthen, give support, console’): from Old French confort (noun), conforter (verb), from late Latin confortare ‘strengthen’, from com- (expressing intensive force) + Latin fortis ‘strong’. The sense ‘something producing physical ease’ arose in the mid 17th century.