Feel at home verb phrase
To feel happy, confident, relaxed, and not worried about doing or using something, or being present in a place or with a person
I’m already feeling at home in my new job as everyone here is very friendly.
I have to practise using my new car until you feel quite at home with it.
I felt at home when I was around with his family.
Be intensely scared or frightened
To try to imagine how would you feel if you were in someone's else situation
to show public complaint and dissatisfaction.
To have both positive and negative feelings at the same time and be uncertain about something.
1. To do something that insures a specific consequence in the future, especially an unfortunate or terrible one.
2. To make someone think or feel something, generally something negative.
The verb "feel" should be conjugated according to its tense.
Used to allude that the last force, problem or burden which is seemingly minor and small causes a person, system or organisation to collapse or fail
Her husband's violent act last night was the straw that broke the donkey's back and she left him