1. He cured my suffering.
2. He cured me of my suffering.
I think the second sentence is correct. My suffering cannot be cured, but I can be cured of my suffering.
Am I correct?
Thanks.
You are correct but we don't usually use 'cure' in this way:
'To cure' means to be relieved of a disease. Suffering is a symptom of
a disease.
You would probably have to say, "He cured me of . . . "(whatever was causing the suffering.)
"Relieved" is a better word than "cured."
"He relieved my suffering" is OK. It is understood that he relieved you of your suffering.
- relieve one's suffering
- ease one's suffering
- alleviate one's suffering
- reduce one's suffering
Are these all good, and do they mean almost the same thing?
Last edited by sunsunmoon; 13-Jun-2011 at 15:24.
Yes.