Our second definition, “A state free of oppressive and unpleasant thoughts and emotions”, has an example sentence with “peace of mind”. I suspect this sense requires “of mind” or similar, and that it’s actually just the “A state of tranquility, quiet, and harmony” sense. That latter seems very different from the “A state free of war” sense: people speak of as nation at peace even if there’s little tranquility in the country. (We should provide a gloss for state there: it’s a status, not a country.) I’m not sure what our current sense 3 (“Harmony in personal relations” means, or whether it’s different from the “A state free of war” sense — or, if so, whether it exists. I’m also not sure we don’t need a different (countable?) sense, found in separate peace.—msh210℠ (talk) 19:00, 13 December 2011 (UTC
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