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operator’s console (sense 3) on an IBM 1620 computer (1964)
Borrowed from Frenchconsole(“bracket”, noun), from consoler(“to console, to comfort”, verb).
Sense of “bracket” either due to a bracket alleviating the load, or due to brackets being decorated with the Christian figure of a consolateur(“consoler”),[1] itself perhaps a pun on the first sense (alleviating load).
Originally used for the bracket itself, then for wall-mounted tables (mounted with a bracket), then for free-standing tables placed against a wall. Use for control system dates at least to 1880s for an “organ console”; use for electrical or electronic control systems dates at least to 1930s in radio, television, and system control, particularly as “mixer console” or “control console”, attached to an equipment rack. This was popularized in computers by mainframes such as the IBM 704 (1954) in terms such as “operator’s console” or “console typewriter”, and then generalized to any attached equipment, particularly for user interaction. The automotive sense harks back to earlier use as “support”.
1961 March, “The new Glasgow Central signalbox”, in Trains Illustrated, page 177:
The operating console of the new Glasgow Central cabin is divided into four sections, each at an angle to each other and each of which is normally under one signalman's control; [...]
The keyboard and screen of a computer or other electronic device.
Consoles continue to gain traction in the video game market.
2010 September 21, Greg Howson, “Are consoles really better than PCs at shooter games?”, in The Guardian:
I rarely play FPS on a PC these days. I'm lazy and it's just so much easier to stick on Halo or Modern Warfare 2 on a console. Plus after a day in front of a PC I don't necessarily want to spend an evening in front of one.
(automotive) A storage tray or container mounted between the seats of an automobile.
(heraldry) A decorative frame or support (in architecture, drawings, etc) around a heraldic shield.
1919, Allan Marquand, Robbia Heraldry, page 60:
On an attractive console with two winged putti as supporters [...] is a marriage coat of arms : Dexter, the Paoli arms : Gules (base), a bend azure charged with five lilies gules, and or (chief); Sinister, the[…]
1994, James H. Marrow, François Avril, The Hours of Simon de Varie, Getty Publications, →ISBN, page 134:
The only authentic reference for the tincture of the shield still in existence is the armorial console in Jacques Coeur's chapel[…]
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
"Do you remember, my friend, that I went to Tostes once when you had just lost your first deceased? I consoled you at that time. I thought of something to say then, but now—" Then, with a loud groan that shook his whole chest, "Ah! this is the end for me, do you see! I saw my wife go, then my son, and now to-day it's my daughter."
Usually pronounced with stress on the last syllable in line with the convention for borrowings from French, corresponding to the stress placement on the English verb. Pronunciation using the stress of the English noun is rather rare.
(video game console):
Mostly used by avid gamers and former gamers. Non-gamers tend to use the synonym spelcomputer instead and may find console pretentious or incorrect. This distinction in term usage seems to date to the mid/late nineties or early aughties.
Typically used for non-portable video game consoles, but may occasionally be applied to handhelds.
French
Etymology
Probably a shortened from consolateur, denoting the same architectural element, ultimately from consoler(“to console, to comfort”).
(by analogy) piece of furniture abutted against a wall, serving as adornment and for the presentation of other fitments (such as pieces in bronze, clocks, vases etc.)
(music) upper part of the harp holding the chords, or the controlling interface of a pipe organ