consolation
/ˌkɑn.səˈleɪ.ʃən/
UK: /ˌkɒn.səˈleɪ.ʃən/
kɑn · SƏLEꞮ · ʃən (3 syllables)
English
Noun Top 9,217
American (Lessac)
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Definition
The act or example of consoling; the condition of being consoled.
Etymology
From Old French consolacion (French consolatio), from Latin cōnsōlātiō, from the deponent verb cōnsōlor (“I console, encourage”) with the -tiō suffix, while cōnsōlor comprises the intensifying prefix con- with the deponent verb sōlor (“I comfort, console”). Equivalent to console + -ation. Doublet of consolatio.
Example Sentences
- "Moreouer the perfit beleue of this article, worketh in all true chriſten people, aloue to continue in this vnitie, and afeare to be caſte out of the ſame, and it worketh in them that be ſinners and repentant, great comforte, and conſolacion, to obteine remiſſion of ſinne, by vertue of Chriſtes paſſion, and adminiſtracion of his ſacramentes at the miniſters handes, ordained for that purpoſe, [...]"
- "[I]f Charles is undone, He'll find half his Acquaintance ruin'd too, and that, you know, is a consolation—"
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