What is another word for feels at home?

Pronunciation: [fˈiːlz at hˈə͡ʊm] (IPA)

The phrase "feels at home" can be expressed in a variety of ways, depending on the context and the level of comfort experienced. Synonyms for this term might include "settled in", "contented", "comfortable", "relaxed", "confident", "familiar", "welcomed", "connected", "accepting", or "embraced". Each of these words captures a slightly different aspect of the feeling of being at home, whether it's the sense of belonging, the feeling of security, or the ease of being oneself in a particular environment. Using these synonyms can help to vary your language and convey a more nuanced sense of your emotions and experiences.

What are the hypernyms for Feels at home?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.
  • Other hypernyms:

    belongs, feels at ease, feels comfortable, feels content, feels relaxed, feels secure.

What are the opposite words for feels at home?

The antonyms for "feels at home" include uncomfortable, unfamiliar, out of place, ill at ease, awkward, restless, unsettled, estranged, and disconnected. These words describe situations where people or things do not fit in with the surroundings or the environment. When someone feels uncomfortable, they might feel tense and apprehensive, and they might find it difficult to relax or concentrate. Similarly, if something is unfamiliar, it might be difficult to understand or relate to. Feeling out of place can create a sense of unease or alienation, while being ill at ease means feeling uneasy or stressed. By contrast, feeling at home suggests comfort, familiarity, and connection.

What are the antonyms for Feels at home?

Famous quotes with Feels at home

  • There is one timeless way of building. It is a thousand years old, and the same today as it has ever been. The great traditional buildings of the past, the villages and tents and temples in which man feels at home, have always been made by people who were very close to the center of this way. It is not possible to make great buildings, or great towns, beautiful places, places where you feel yourself, places where you feel alive, except by following this way. And, as you will see, this way will lead anyone who looks for it to buildings which are themselves as ancient in their form, as the trees and hills, and as our faces are.
    Christopher Alexander
  • Our society, it turns out, can use modern art. A restaurant, today, will order a mural by Míro in as easy and matter-of-fact a spirit as, twenty-five years ago, it would have ordered one by Maxfield Parrish. The president of a paint factory goes home, sits down by his fireplace—it like a chromium aquarium set into the wall by a wall-safe company that has branched out into interior decorating, but there is a log burning in it, he calls it a firelace, let’s call it a fireplace too—the president sits down, folds his hands on his stomach, and stares at two paintings by Jackson Pollock that he has hung on the wall opposite him. He feels at home with them; in fact, as he looks at them he not only feels at home, he feels as if he were back at the paint factory. And his children—if he has any—his children cry for Calder. He uses thoroughly advanced, wholly non-representational artists to design murals, posters, institutional advertisements: if we have the patience (or are given the opportuity) to wait until the West has declined a little longer, we shall all see the advertisements of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner, and Smith illustrated by Jean Dubuffet. This president’s minor executives may not be willing to hang a Kandinsky in the house, but they will wear one, if you make it into a sport shirt or a pair of swimming-trunks; and if you make it into a sofa, they will lie on it. They and their wives and children will sit on a porcupine, if you first exhibit it at the Museum of Modern Art and say that it is a chair. In fact, there is nothing, nothing in the whole world that someone won’t buy and sit in if you tell him it is a chair: the great new art form of our age, the one that will take anything we put in it, is the chair. If Hieronymus Bosch, if Christian Morgenstern, if the Marquis de Sade were living at this hour, what chairs they would be designing!
    Randall Jarrell

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