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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
repose
I.noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Even the rare moments of repose were filled with plans.
▪ He could see Steen's face in its pained repose, and felt certain that he was up against a case of murder.
▪ His reactions caused him pleasure, fury, deep repose or inner peace.
▪ The only true repose is in the grave.
▪ This would have been more expensive than the winding-sheet but it presented the body in a more natural attitude of repose.
II.verb
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And if we allowed there to be a deity or deities, what confidence could we repose in them?
▪ Dominic and Piers repose in unruffled calm nearby.
▪ Such confidence can not safely be reposed in people of very mean or low condition.
▪ The relic reposes in a glass-fronted reliquary beneath a side altar of the same church in which it was first interred.
▪ The strength of the court used to be that, when all else failed, trust continued to repose there at least.
▪ Then you reposed an absolutely blind faith in the Emperor!
▪ Two skulls repose upon the same Worn pillow in their dusty mine.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
repose

Angle \An"gle\ ([a^][ng]"g'l), n. [F. angle, L. angulus angle, corner; akin to uncus hook, Gr. 'agky`los bent, crooked, angular, 'a`gkos a bend or hollow, AS. angel hook, fish-hook, G. angel, and F. anchor.]

  1. The inclosed space near the point where two lines meet; a corner; a nook.

    Into the utmost angle of the world.
    --Spenser.

    To search the tenderest angles of the heart.
    --Milton.

  2. (Geom.)

    1. The figure made by. two lines which meet.

    2. The difference of direction of two lines. In the lines meet, the point of meeting is the vertex of the angle.

  3. A projecting or sharp corner; an angular fragment.

    Though but an angle reached him of the stone.
    --Dryden.

  4. (Astrol.) A name given to four of the twelve astrological ``houses.'' [Obs.]
    --Chaucer.

  5. [AS. angel.] A fishhook; tackle for catching fish, consisting of a line, hook, and bait, with or without a rod. Give me mine angle: we 'll to the river there. --Shak. A fisher next his trembling angle bears. --Pope. Acute angle, one less than a right angle, or less than 90[deg]. Adjacent or Contiguous angles, such as have one leg common to both angles. Alternate angles. See Alternate. Angle bar.

    1. (Carp.) An upright bar at the angle where two faces of a polygonal or bay window meet.
      --Knight.

    2. (Mach.) Same as Angle iron.

      Angle bead (Arch.), a bead worked on or fixed to the angle of any architectural work, esp. for protecting an angle of a wall.

      Angle brace, Angle tie (Carp.), a brace across an interior angle of a wooden frame, forming the hypothenuse and securing the two side pieces together.
      --Knight.

      Angle iron (Mach.), a rolled bar or plate of iron having one or more angles, used for forming the corners, or connecting or sustaining the sides of an iron structure to which it is riveted.

      Angle leaf (Arch.), a detail in the form of a leaf, more or less conventionalized, used to decorate and sometimes to strengthen an angle.

      Angle meter, an instrument for measuring angles, esp. for ascertaining the dip of strata.

      Angle shaft (Arch.), an enriched angle bead, often having a capital or base, or both.

      Curvilineal angle, one formed by two curved lines.

      External angles, angles formed by the sides of any right-lined figure, when the sides are produced or lengthened.

      Facial angle. See under Facial.

      Internal angles, those which are within any right-lined figure.

      Mixtilineal angle, one formed by a right line with a curved line.

      Oblique angle, one acute or obtuse, in opposition to a right angle.

      Obtuse angle, one greater than a right angle, or more than 90[deg].

      Optic angle. See under Optic.

      Rectilineal or Right-lined angle, one formed by two right lines.

      Right angle, one formed by a right line falling on another perpendicularly, or an angle of 90[deg] (measured by a quarter circle).

      Solid angle, the figure formed by the meeting of three or more plane angles at one point.

      Spherical angle, one made by the meeting of two arcs of great circles, which mutually cut one another on the surface of a globe or sphere.

      Visual angle, the angle formed by two rays of light, or two straight lines drawn from the extreme points of an object to the center of the eye.

      For Angles of commutation, draught, incidence, reflection, refraction, position, repose, fraction, see Commutation, Draught, Incidence, Reflection, Refraction, etc.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
repose

"lie at rest," mid-15c., from Middle French reposer, from Old French repauser (10c.), from Late Latin repausare "cause to rest," from Latin re-, here probably an intensive prefix (see re-), + Late Latin pausare "to stop" (see pause (v.)). Related: Reposed; reposing.

repose

"put, place," mid-15c., from Latin repos-, stem of reponere "put back, set back, replace, restore; put away, lay out, stretch out," from re- "back, away" (see re-) + ponere "to put, place" (past participle positus; see position (n.)). Or perhaps [Klein] formed in Middle English from Old French poser, on model of disposen "dispose."

repose

"rest," c.1500, from Middle French repos (11c.), back-formation from reposer (see repose (v.1)).

Wiktionary
repose

n. 1 (context dated English) rest, sleep 2 quietness, ease; peace, calmness 3 (context geology English) period between eruptions of a volcano. vb. 1 To lie at rest; to rest. 2 To lie; to be supported. 3 To lay, to set down. 4 To place, have, or rest; to set; to entrust. 5 To reside in something. 6 (context figuratively English) To remain or abide restfully without anxiety or alarms.

WordNet
repose
  1. n. freedom from activity (work or strain or responsibility); "took his repose by the swimming pool" [syn: rest, ease, relaxation]

  2. the absence of mental stress or anxiety [syn: peace, peacefulness, peace of mind, serenity, heartsease, ataraxis]

  3. a disposition free from stress or emotion [syn: quiet, placidity, serenity, tranquillity, tranquility]

repose
  1. v. put or confide something in a person or thing; "These philosophers reposed the law in the people"

  2. be inherent or innate in; [syn: rest, reside]

  3. lie when dead; "Mao reposes in his mausoleum"

  4. lean in a comfortable resting position; "He was reposing on the couch" [syn: recumb, recline]

  5. put in a horizontal position; "lay the books on the table"; "lay the patient carefully onto the bed" [syn: lay, put down]

  6. to put something (eg trust) in something; "The nation reposed its confidence in the King"

Gazetteer
Wikipedia
Repose

Repose is a word meaning "rest" or "calmness".

Repose may also refer to:

  • Lying in repose, when the body of a deceased person is set out for public viewing
  • Mount Repose (disambiguation), several mountains
  • USS Repose, several US Navy ships

Usage examples of "repose".

And he hit Polk County under the jaw and knocked him clean acrost the yard into a rain barrel amongst the rooins of which he reposed till he was rescued and revived some hours later.

These victorious Saracens enjoyed at Damascus a month of pleasure and repose: the spoil was divided by the discretion of Abu Obeidah: an equal share was allotted to a soldier and to his horse, and a double portion was reserved for the noble coursers of the Arabian breed.

Now and again, Braggen bared the pale face, inanimate as death in repose.

Repose not yourselves on your couches, nay, bestir yourselves as soon as ye recognize your Lord, the Creator, and hear of the things which have befallen Him, and hasten to His assistance.

The houses of the workpeople at Blarney are neat and trim, white and clean, and a repose to the eyes of beholders, sick of slouching thatch and bulging mud walls.

Now, in contrast to the Occidental thinker, who covets alternation because in his cold climate action is the means of enjoyment, the Hindu, in the languid East, where repose is the condition of enjoyment, conceives the highest blessedness to consist in exemption from every disturbance, in an unruffled unity excluding all changes.

Not any forensic act of faith in atoning blood, but ingrained piety a modest renunciation before the reality of things is the grand gateway of souls to the blessedness and repose of God.

Feynman and Drexler and Merkle, Chen and Singh and Finkle-McGraw reposed on a numinous buckyball, some of them reading books and some pointing toward the work-in-progress in a manner that implied constructive criticism.

The circle which encompasses the dome, lightly reposes on four strong arches, and their weight is firmly supported by four massy piles, whose strength is assisted, on the northern and southern sides, by four columns of Egyptian granite.

The skills of Alexandria repose with the Jews and Metics, and the latter will accept you because the Jews do.

This from a professor of midwifery, who some time ago assured a gentleman whom he met in consultation, that the night on which they met was the eighteenth in succession that he himself had been summoned from his repose, seems hardly satisfactory.

The hill, meet for such sublime repose, looks ever calmly on the humble, straggling homes of the Wallencampers below, and sees the lonely river winding near, and hears, by night and day, the monody of deeper waters.

Should borrow body and form and hue And tower in torrents of floral flame, The crimson bougainvillea grew, What starlit brow uplifted to the same Majestic regress of the summering sky, What ultimate thing -- hushed, holy, throned as high Above the currents that tarnish and profane As silver summits are whose pure repose No curious eyes disclose Nor any footfalls stain, But round their beauty on azure evenings Only the oreads go on gauzy wings, Only the oreads troop with dance and song And airy beings in rainbow mists who throng Out of those wonderful worlds that lie afar Betwixt the outmost cloud and the nearest star.

From this state of repose, amounting almost to apathy respecting the past, his thoughts were carried forward to the future, which, in spite of all that existed to overcloud the prospect, glittered with such hues as, under much happier auspices, his unstimulated imagination had not been able to produce, even in its most exalted state.

In those hours sacred to the relaxation of undress and the back hair, in the upper penetralia of the household, where two or three or six are gathered together on and about the cushioned frame intended for repose, do they converse, or indulge in that sort of chat from which not one idea is carried away?