noun, verb, eased, eas⋅ing.| 1. | freedom from labor, pain, or physical annoyance; tranquil rest; comfort: to enjoy one's ease. |
| 2. | freedom from concern, anxiety, or solicitude; a quiet state of mind: to be at ease about one's health. |
| 3. | freedom from difficulty or great effort; facility: It can be done with ease. |
| 4. | freedom from financial need; plenty: a life of ease on a moderate income. |
| 5. | freedom from stiffness, constraint, or formality; unaffectedness: ease of manner; the ease and elegance of her poetry. |
| 6. | to free from anxiety or care: to ease one's mind. |
| 7. | to mitigate, lighten, or lessen: to ease pain. |
| 8. | to release from pressure, tension, or the like. |
| 9. | to move or shift with great care: to ease a car into a narrow parking space. |
| 10. | to render less difficult; facilitate: I'll help if it will ease your job. |
| 11. | to provide (an architectural member) with an easement. |
| 12. | Shipbuilding. to trim (a timber of a wooden hull) so as to fair its surface into the desired form of the hull. |
| 13. | Nautical.
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| 14. | to abate in severity, pressure, tension, etc. (often fol. by off or up). |
| 15. | to become less painful, burdensome, etc. |
| 16. | to move, shift, or be moved or be shifted with great care. |
| 17. | ease out, to remove from a position of authority, a job, or the like, esp. by methods intended to be tactful: He was eased out as division head to make way for the boss's nephew. |
| 18. | at ease. Military. a position of rest in which soldiers may relax but may not leave their places or talk. |

Ease
General purpose parallel programming language, combining the process constructs of CSP and the distributed data structures of Linda. "Programming with Ease: Semiotic Definition of the Language", S.E. Zenith,
ease
In addition to the idioms beginning with ease, also see at ease; ill at ease. Also see under easily; easy.