rest
1
[ rest ]
/ rɛst /
noun
verb (used without object)
verb (used with object)
Idioms for rest
- in a state of repose, as in sleep.
- dead.
- quiescent; inactive; not in motion: the inertia of an object at rest.
- free from worry; tranquil: Nothing could put his mind at rest.
- to inter (a dead body); bury: He was laid to rest last Thursday.
- to allay, suppress, or appease.
at rest,
lay to rest,
Origin of rest
1
before 900; (noun) Middle English, Old English; akin to German
Rast; (v.) Middle English
resten, Old English
restan; akin to German
rasten
OTHER WORDS FROM rest
rest·er, nounWORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH rest
rest wrestWords nearby rest
British Dictionary definitions for at rest (1 of 2)
rest
1
/ (rɛst) /
noun
verb
Derived forms of rest
rester, nounWord Origin for rest
Old English
ræst, reste, of Germanic origin; related to Gothic
rasta a mile, Old Norse
röst mile
British Dictionary definitions for at rest (2 of 2)
rest
2
/ (rɛst) /
noun the rest
something left or remaining; remainder
the others
the rest of the world
verb
(copula)
to continue to be (as specified); remain
rest assured
Word Origin for rest
C15: from Old French
rester to remain, from Latin
rēstāre, from
re- +
stāre to
stand
Medical definitions for at rest
rest
[ rĕst ]
n.
v.
Idioms and Phrases with at rest (1 of 2)
at rest
In a state of inactivity or repose, either physical or mental. For example, The doctor's clear explanation put her mind at rest. Chaucer used this idiom in Troilus and Cressida (c. 1374): “I mine heart set at rest upon this point.” Also see lay at rest.
Dead, as in His soul is now at rest with his forebears. This usage, employing rest to refer to death's repose, is less common today. [1300s]
Idioms and Phrases with at rest (2 of 2)
rest