solacer 的 2 个定义
Also called sol·ace·ment.
- comfort in sorrow, misfortune, or trouble; alleviation of distress or discomfort.
- something that gives comfort, consolation, or relief: The minister's visit was the dying man's only solace.
sol·aced, sol·ac·ing.
- to comfort, console, or cheer.
- to alleviate or relieve.
solacer 近义词
等同于 sympathizer
更多solacer例句
- As 2020 continues to be unrelenting, I try my best to find the rare crumb of solace where I can.
- Perhaps more than therapy, writing also offered a kind of solace.
- Understanding that we’re one form of a molecular configuration among a sea of molecules that’s reforming and disambiguating, and reforming constantly, gives solace when I consider death.
- We are incredibly grateful that our plants offer that little bit of solace and joy via nature into the home.
- So even as rituals are being disrupted and diluted, people are seeking new sources of solace.
- And there is definitely something to finding solace in food, familiarity, and memory.
- That had to give them an enormous reservoir of moral strength and solace.
- It is no small solace, no doubt, that Bloomberg has made both Winkler and Doctoroff millionaires several times over.
- Highway safety flares provided light as the clans joined by loss sought solace in prayer and song.
- The CDC, Fort Benning, and the solace of the prison all fail to give him the comfort of the past.
- Then we blotted out the fire, and, stretching ourselves on the ground, had recourse to the solace of tobacco.
- Tobacco is less a fosterer of thought than a solace of mental vacuity.
- Better postpone your solace to more fitting time and place—the close of day and your own veranda.
- To the Indians and the Negroes, tobacco is almost the only solace in this transient life.
- On the way to Church the pipe is lighted, and after service it is the solace of the evening hour.