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Definition of ease noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

ease

noun
 
/iːz/
 
/iːz/
[uncountable]Idioms
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  1. lack of difficulty
    • with ease He passed the exam with ease.
    • The ease with which she learns languages is astonishing.
    • for ease of something All important points are numbered for ease of reference (= so that you can find them easily).
    • This computer is popular for its good design and ease of use.
    Extra Examples
    • United continued to score with alarming ease.
    • I was surprised at the apparent ease with which he got into the building.
    • She returned her opponent's serve with contemptuous ease.
    • The back of the garment is split for ease in walking.
    • The car brings ease of access to the countryside.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • consummate
    • great
    • astonishing
    preposition
    • for ease in
    • for ease of
    • with ease
    See full entry
  2. the state of feeling relaxed or comfortable without worries, problems or pain
    • In his retirement, he lived a life of ease.
  3. Word OriginMiddle English: from Old French aise, based on Latin adjacens ‘lying close by’, present participle of adjacere. The verb is originally from Old French aisier, from the phrase a aise ‘at ease’; in later use from the noun.
Idioms
(stand) at ease
  1. used as a command to soldiers to tell them to stand with their feet apart and their hands behind their backs compare attention
at (your) ease
  1. relaxed and confident and not nervous or embarrassed
    • I never feel completely at ease with him.
    • She was at her ease straight away in the new job.
    Topics Personal qualitiesc2
ill at ease
  1. feeling uncomfortable and embarrassed
    • I felt ill at ease in such formal clothes.
put somebody at (their) ease
  1. to make somebody feel relaxed and confident, not nervous or embarrassed
    • Try to put the candidate at ease by being friendly and informal.
put/set somebody’s mind at ease/rest
  1. to do or say something to make somebody stop worrying about something synonym reassure
See ease in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee ease in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
dizzy
adjective
 
 
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